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  • 2015CornellDuHouxPhD

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Journeys to holiness: lay sanctity in the Central Middle Ages, c.970-c.1120

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Unpublished

Standard

Journeys to holiness: lay sanctity in the Central Middle Ages, c.970-c.1120. / Cornell du Houx, Adrian.
Lancaster University, 2015. 266 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Harvard

Cornell du Houx, A 2015, 'Journeys to holiness: lay sanctity in the Central Middle Ages, c.970-c.1120', PhD, Lancaster University.

APA

Cornell du Houx, A. (2015). Journeys to holiness: lay sanctity in the Central Middle Ages, c.970-c.1120. [Doctoral Thesis, Lancaster University]. Lancaster University.

Vancouver

Cornell du Houx A. Journeys to holiness: lay sanctity in the Central Middle Ages, c.970-c.1120. Lancaster University, 2015. 266 p.

Author

Cornell du Houx, Adrian. / Journeys to holiness : lay sanctity in the Central Middle Ages, c.970-c.1120. Lancaster University, 2015. 266 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{ed39618bdc39463694b6fe4234ccb7a0,
title = "Journeys to holiness: lay sanctity in the Central Middle Ages, c.970-c.1120",
abstract = "This dissertation analyses a collection of Lives (vitae) of lay saints from western Europe who were neither martyrs nor from a royal family, to find that lay sanctity was a significant phenomenon throughout the eleventh century. Previously historians (notably Andr{\'e} Vauchez) had assumed that the Gregorian Reform hampered its emergence until the twelfth century. In fact lay sanctity was a complex category of sainthood that both underscores and challenges historians{\textquoteright} narratives of this reform. The principal, linking feature of its texts is found to bethe saints{\textquoteright} dedication to pilgrimage and voluntary exile at a time when the laity were increasingly exploiting the benefits of spiritual travel.The first part of the dissertation consists of a series of local and individual studies, the most detailed of which pertain to southern France and northern Italy. These demonstrate, among other things, how lay sanctity was promoted during the Peace of God movement (chapter 1), the overlap between secular and spiritual heroic ideologies on pilgrimage routes (chapter 2), a reformist centre at Lucca venerating {\textquoteleft}exotic{\textquoteright} saints (chapter 3), and the emergence of a new asceticism in line with larger developments in eremitism and the evangelical revival (chapter 4). The second part argues for a vital link between pilgrimage, inall its forms, and lay sanctity, locating the vitae within both medieval beliefs about pilgrimage and modern explanations of ritual, especially anthropological models of liminality (chapter 5). This part also addresses the overlap between the laity and hermits, as well as the situation of knightly converts: these {\textquoteleft}quasi-lay{\textquoteright} saints were finding new ways to express their devotion and they too sought pilgrimage as a solution to their spiritual crises (chapter 6). The conclusion relates the findings to the twelfth century and beyond: following discussion of the cult of Homobonus of Cremona (d. 1197), it warns against simplistic attempts to construct grand narratives for the development of lay sanctity in the Middle Ages.",
author = "{Cornell du Houx}, Adrian",
year = "2015",
month = jan,
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Journeys to holiness

T2 - lay sanctity in the Central Middle Ages, c.970-c.1120

AU - Cornell du Houx, Adrian

PY - 2015/1

Y1 - 2015/1

N2 - This dissertation analyses a collection of Lives (vitae) of lay saints from western Europe who were neither martyrs nor from a royal family, to find that lay sanctity was a significant phenomenon throughout the eleventh century. Previously historians (notably André Vauchez) had assumed that the Gregorian Reform hampered its emergence until the twelfth century. In fact lay sanctity was a complex category of sainthood that both underscores and challenges historians’ narratives of this reform. The principal, linking feature of its texts is found to bethe saints’ dedication to pilgrimage and voluntary exile at a time when the laity were increasingly exploiting the benefits of spiritual travel.The first part of the dissertation consists of a series of local and individual studies, the most detailed of which pertain to southern France and northern Italy. These demonstrate, among other things, how lay sanctity was promoted during the Peace of God movement (chapter 1), the overlap between secular and spiritual heroic ideologies on pilgrimage routes (chapter 2), a reformist centre at Lucca venerating ‘exotic’ saints (chapter 3), and the emergence of a new asceticism in line with larger developments in eremitism and the evangelical revival (chapter 4). The second part argues for a vital link between pilgrimage, inall its forms, and lay sanctity, locating the vitae within both medieval beliefs about pilgrimage and modern explanations of ritual, especially anthropological models of liminality (chapter 5). This part also addresses the overlap between the laity and hermits, as well as the situation of knightly converts: these ‘quasi-lay’ saints were finding new ways to express their devotion and they too sought pilgrimage as a solution to their spiritual crises (chapter 6). The conclusion relates the findings to the twelfth century and beyond: following discussion of the cult of Homobonus of Cremona (d. 1197), it warns against simplistic attempts to construct grand narratives for the development of lay sanctity in the Middle Ages.

AB - This dissertation analyses a collection of Lives (vitae) of lay saints from western Europe who were neither martyrs nor from a royal family, to find that lay sanctity was a significant phenomenon throughout the eleventh century. Previously historians (notably André Vauchez) had assumed that the Gregorian Reform hampered its emergence until the twelfth century. In fact lay sanctity was a complex category of sainthood that both underscores and challenges historians’ narratives of this reform. The principal, linking feature of its texts is found to bethe saints’ dedication to pilgrimage and voluntary exile at a time when the laity were increasingly exploiting the benefits of spiritual travel.The first part of the dissertation consists of a series of local and individual studies, the most detailed of which pertain to southern France and northern Italy. These demonstrate, among other things, how lay sanctity was promoted during the Peace of God movement (chapter 1), the overlap between secular and spiritual heroic ideologies on pilgrimage routes (chapter 2), a reformist centre at Lucca venerating ‘exotic’ saints (chapter 3), and the emergence of a new asceticism in line with larger developments in eremitism and the evangelical revival (chapter 4). The second part argues for a vital link between pilgrimage, inall its forms, and lay sanctity, locating the vitae within both medieval beliefs about pilgrimage and modern explanations of ritual, especially anthropological models of liminality (chapter 5). This part also addresses the overlap between the laity and hermits, as well as the situation of knightly converts: these ‘quasi-lay’ saints were finding new ways to express their devotion and they too sought pilgrimage as a solution to their spiritual crises (chapter 6). The conclusion relates the findings to the twelfth century and beyond: following discussion of the cult of Homobonus of Cremona (d. 1197), it warns against simplistic attempts to construct grand narratives for the development of lay sanctity in the Middle Ages.

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -