Magic in the Cloister: Pious Motives, Illicit Interests, and Occult Approaches to the Medieval Universe

Author:   Sophie Page (University College London)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
ISBN:  

9780271060347


Pages:   248
Publication Date:   15 October 2015
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Magic in the Cloister: Pious Motives, Illicit Interests, and Occult Approaches to the Medieval Universe


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Overview

During the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries a group of monks with occult interests donated what became a remarkable collection of more than thirty magic texts to the library of the Benedictine abbey of St. Augustine's in Canterbury. The monks collected texts that provided positive justifications for the practice of magic and books in which works of magic were copied side by side with works of more licit genres. In Magic in the Cloister, Sophie Page uses this collection to explore the gradual shift toward more positive attitudes to magical texts and ideas in medieval Europe. She examines what attracted monks to magic texts, in spite of the dangers involved in studying condemned works, and how the monks combined magic with their intellectual interests and monastic life. By showing how it was possible for religious insiders to integrate magical studies with their orthodox worldview, Magic in the Cloister contributes to a broader understanding of the role of magical texts and ideas and their acceptance in the late Middle Ages.

Full Product Details

Author:   Sophie Page (University College London)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Imprint:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.885kg
ISBN:  

9780271060347


ISBN 10:   0271060344
Pages:   248
Publication Date:   15 October 2015
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Contents List of Illustrations Acknowledgments List of Abbreviations Introduction 1 Monks and Their Magic Texts at St. Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury 2 Natural Magic: The Basilisk and the Lodestone 3 The Liber vaccae: Magical Uses of Monstrous Creations 4 Image Magic: Harnessing Power in the Harmonious Universe 5 The Liber de essentia spirituum: Magic, Revelation, and Fellowship with Spirits 6 The Ars notoria and Its Monastic Audience Epilogue John Dee, St. Augustine's Manuscripts, and Renaissance Magic Appendix 1 Translation of the Glossulae super Librum imaginum lunae Appendix 2 Translation of the Liber de essentia spirituum Notes Selected Bibliography Index

Reviews

Sophie Page s insightful and absorbing contribution to the study of Western learned magic brings together many strands that comprise approaches to the medieval universe to focus on the place of magic within it; and in so doing, she demonstrates how the monks at St. Augustine s were able to incorporate the study of magic into their traditionally Christian view of the world. Elizabeth Wade-Sirabian, Preternature


All histories have limits, but the core of this study is full of rich detail and judicious analysis. Page deftly illuminates not just the contents of a major library of medieval magic but also the intriguing intellectual and spiritual contexts in which it took shape. -Michael D. Bailey, American Historical Review An important contribution to the recent wave of scholarship on the history of European magic. . . . Page's portrayal of monasteries as centres of magic puts us in a much better position to assess the complicated institutional context of `magical' heteropraxy. -Egil Asprem, Pomegranate: The International Journal of Pagan Studies Engages from the start. . . . Delivers beautifully clear guidance through a complex and technical body of material. -Anne Lawrence-Mathers, Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies Page's work marks a significant contribution to an emerging area of the study of the history of magic, one that has the potential to bridge a gap between what we know of magical texts, and what we can infer about magical readers and practitioners. As such, it has earned a welcome place in my own magical library at home. -Nancy Mandeville Caciola, Renaissance Quarterly Sophie Page's insightful and absorbing contribution to the study of Western learned magic brings together many strands that comprise `approaches to the medieval universe' to focus on the place of magic within it; and in so doing, she demonstrates how the monks at St. Augustine's were able to incorporate the study of magic into their traditionally Christian view of the world. -Elizabeth Wade-Sirabian, Preternature Page contextualizes licit and illicit forms of magic and the reasons for their classification in the medieval mind, focusing upon magical practice in the monastery. Each chapter is thoroughly researched enough to be of interest to the specialist in the field but also provides enough details regarding the texts and concepts in question to appeal to the non-specialist as well. . . . Magic in the Cloister is well worth the read, particularly for the academic audience who is coming to these texts for the first time. -Michael Heyes, Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions There is something thrilling for the researcher about working in a library for the first time, familiarizing oneself with its contents, both their riches and their lacunae, figuring out its organizational principles, stumbling upon evidence of past users and important benefactors, and then by ever more extended use, discerning the patterns and trajectory of the library's development over time. . . . As Sophie Page demonstrates in Magic in the Cloister, the thrill is not limited to a summer spent in a scrupulously maintained Fachbibliothek at a twenty-first-century university institute, but can also be won through a more constructed visit to a library in the distant past. The library in question in Magic in the Cloister is the late-medieval library of the Abbey of St. Augustine in Canterbury, especially its collection of learned magic. . . . Magic in the Cloister is a stimulating work: its research is meticulous, its insights compelling, and its prose limpid. For this reviewer, the first visit to the library of St. Augustine's was thrilling indeed. -David J. Collins, S.J., Catholic Historical Review Magic in the Cloister offers a fascinating picture of learned monks reading and even putting into practice magical texts that were kept in the library of their monastery. St. Augustine's, Canterbury, offered not only a haven for prayer but also a laboratory for occult activity. -Charles Burnett, The Warburg Institute, University of London-School of Advanced Study In addition to exploring manuscripts and their contents in detail, Magic in the Cloister is original in its focus on a known group of men who owned and read these books and perhaps tried out some of the rituals in them. This is unusual because many manuscripts of magical texts have been lost, or we do not know who owned them. The book therefore presents much new information about the readers of magical texts. It also approaches this issue from a new angle. Sophie Page shows that magical texts could appeal to people who were part of the religious establishment (monks in a wealthy monastery) and who had a monastic vocation. -Catherine Rider, University of Exeter


In addition to exploring manuscripts and their contents in detail, Magic in the Cloister is original in its focus on a known group of men who owned and read these books and perhaps tried out some of the rituals in them. This is unusual because many manuscripts of magical texts have been lost, or we do not know who owned them. The book therefore presents much new information about the readers of magical texts. It also approaches this issue from a new angle. Sophie Page shows that magical texts could appeal to people who were part of the religious establishment (monks in a wealthy monastery) and who had a monastic vocation. Catherine Rider, University of Exeter There is something thrilling for the researcher about working in a library for the first time, familiarizing oneself with its contents, both their riches and their lacunae, figuring out its organizational principles, stumbling upon evidence of past users and important benefactors, and then by ever more extended use, discerning the patterns and trajectory of the library s development over time. . . . As Sophie Page demonstrates in Magic in the Cloister, the thrill is not limited to a summer spent in a scrupulously maintained Fachbibliothek at a twenty-first-century university institute, but can also be won through a more constructed visit to a library in the distant past. The library in question in Magic in the Cloister is the late-medieval library of the Abbey of St. Augustine in Canterbury, especially its collection of learned magic. . . . Magic in the Cloister is a stimulating work: its research is meticulous, its insights compelling, and its prose limpid. For this reviewer, the first visit to the library of St. Augustine s was thrilling indeed. David J. Collins, S.J., Catholic Historical Review Magic in the Cloister offers a fascinating picture of learned monks reading and even putting into practice magical texts that were kept in the library of their monastery. St. Augustine's, Canterbury, offered not only a haven for prayer but also a laboratory for occult activity. Charles Burnett, The Warburg Institute, University of London School of Advanced Study Page contextualizes licit and illicit forms of magic and the reasons for their classification in the medieval mind, focusing upon magical practice in the monastery. Each chapter is thoroughly researched enough to be of interest to the specialist in the field but also provides enough details regarding the texts and concepts in question to appeal to the non-specialist as well. . . . Magic in the Cloister is well worth the read, particularly for the academic audience who is coming to these texts for the first time. Michael Heyes, Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions All histories have limits, but the core of this study is full of rich detail and judicious analysis. Page deftly illuminates not just the contents of a major library of medieval magic but also the intriguing intellectual and spiritual contexts in which it took shape. --Michael D. Bailey, American Historical Review An important contribution to the recent wave of scholarship on the history of European magic. . . . Page's portrayal of monasteries as centres of magic puts us in a much better position to assess the complicated institutional context of 'magical' heteropraxy. --Egil Asprem, Pomegranate: The International Journal of Pagan Studies Engages from the start. . . . Delivers beautifully clear guidance through a complex and technical body of material. --Anne Lawrence-Mathers, Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies Page's work marks a significant contribution to an emerging area of the study of the history of magic, one that has the potential to bridge a gap between what we know of magical texts, and what we can infer about magical readers and practitioners. As such, it has earned a welcome place in my own magical library at home. --Nancy Mandeville Caciola, Renaissance Quarterly Sophie Page's insightful and absorbing contribution to the study of Western learned magic brings together many strands that comprise 'approaches to the medieval universe' to focus on the place of magic within it; and in so doing, she demonstrates how the monks at St. Augustine's were able to incorporate the study of magic into their traditionally Christian view of the world. --Elizabeth Wade-Sirabian, Preternature Page contextualizes licit and illicit forms of magic and the reasons for their classification in the medieval mind, focusing upon magical practice in the monastery. Each chapter is thoroughly researched enough to be of interest to the specialist in the field but also provides enough details regarding the texts and concepts in question to appeal to the non-specialist as well. . . . Magic in the Cloister is well worth the read, particularly for the academic audience who is coming to these texts for the first time. --Michael Heyes, Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions There is something thrilling for the researcher about working in a library for the first time, familiarizing oneself with its contents, both their riches and their lacunae, figuring out its organizational principles, stumbling upon evidence of past users and important benefactors, and then by ever more extended use, discerning the patterns and trajectory of the library's development over time. . . . As Sophie Page demonstrates in Magic in the Cloister, the thrill is not limited to a summer spent in a scrupulously maintained Fachbibliothek at a twenty-first-century university institute, but can also be won through a more constructed visit to a library in the distant past. The library in question in Magic in the Cloister is the late-medieval library of the Abbey of St. Augustine in Canterbury, especially its collection of learned magic. . . . Magic in the Cloister is a stimulating work: its research is meticulous, its insights compelling, and its prose limpid. For this reviewer, the first visit to the library of St. Augustine's was thrilling indeed. --David J. Collins, S.J., Catholic Historical Review Magic in the Cloister offers a fascinating picture of learned monks reading and even putting into practice magical texts that were kept in the library of their monastery. St. Augustine's, Canterbury, offered not only a haven for prayer but also a laboratory for occult activity. --Charles Burnett, The Warburg Institute, University of London--School of Advanced Study In addition to exploring manuscripts and their contents in detail, Magic in the Cloister is original in its focus on a known group of men who owned and read these books and perhaps tried out some of the rituals in them. This is unusual because many manuscripts of magical texts have been lost, or we do not know who owned them. The book therefore presents much new information about the readers of magical texts. It also approaches this issue from a new angle. Sophie Page shows that magical texts could appeal to people who were part of the religious establishment (monks in a wealthy monastery) and who had a monastic vocation. --Catherine Rider, University of Exeter Page s work marks a signi cant contribution to an emerging area of the study of the history of magic, one that has the potential to bridge a gap between what we know of magical texts, and what we can infer about magical readers and practitioners. As such, it has earned a welcome place in my own magical library at home. Nancy Mandeville Caciola, Renaissance Quarterly Sophie Page s insightful and absorbing contribution to the study of Western learned magic brings together many strands that comprise approaches to the medieval universe to focus on the place of magic within it; and in so doing, she demonstrates how the monks at St. Augustine s were able to incorporate the study of magic into their traditionally Christian view of the world. Elizabeth Wade-Sirabian, Preternature Page contextualizes licit and illicit forms of magic and the reasons for their classification in the medieval mind, focusing upon magical practice in the monastery. Each chapter is thoroughly researched enough to be of interest to the specialist in the field but also provides enough details regarding the texts and concepts in question to appeal to the non-specialist as well. . . . Magic in the Cloister is well worth the read, particularly for the academic audience who is coming to these texts for the first time. Michael Heyes, Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions There is something thrilling for the researcher about working in a library for the first time, familiarizing oneself with its contents, both their riches and their lacunae, figuring out its organizational principles, stumbling upon evidence of past users and important benefactors, and then by ever more extended use, discerning the patterns and trajectory of the library s development over time. . . . As Sophie Page demonstrates in Magic in the Cloister, the thrill is not limited to a summer spent in a scrupulously maintained Fachbibliothek at a twenty-first-century university institute, but can also be won through a more constructed visit to a library in the distant past. The library in question in Magic in the Cloister is the late-medieval library of the Abbey of St. Augustine in Canterbury, especially its collection of learned magic. . . . Magic in the Cloister is a stimulating work: its research is meticulous, its insights compelling, and its prose limpid. For this reviewer, the first visit to the library of St. Augustine s was thrilling indeed. David J. Collins, S.J., Catholic Historical Review Magic in the Cloister offers a fascinating picture of learned monks reading and even putting into practice magical texts that were kept in the library of their monastery. St. Augustine's, Canterbury, offered not only a haven for prayer but also a laboratory for occult activity. Charles Burnett, The Warburg Institute, University of London School of Advanced Study In addition to exploring manuscripts and their contents in detail, Magic in the Cloister is original in its focus on a known group of men who owned and read these books and perhaps tried out some of the rituals in them. This is unusual because many manuscripts of magical texts have been lost, or we do not know who owned them. The book therefore presents much new information about the readers of magical texts. It also approaches this issue from a new angle. Sophie Page shows that magical texts could appeal to people who were part of the religious establishment (monks in a wealthy monastery) and who had a monastic vocation. Catherine Rider, University of Exeter Sophie Page s insightful and absorbing contribution to the study of Western learned magic brings together many strands that comprise approaches to the medieval universe to focus on the place of magic within it; and in so doing, she demonstrates how the monks at St. Augustine s were able to incorporate the study of magic into their traditionally Christian view of the world. Elizabeth Wade-Sirabian, Preternature Page contextualizes licit and illicit forms of magic and the reasons for their classification in the medieval mind, focusing upon magical practice in the monastery. Each chapter is thoroughly researched enough to be of interest to the specialist in the field but also provides enough details regarding the texts and concepts in question to appeal to the non-specialist as well. . . . Magic in the Cloister is well worth the read, particularly for the academic audience who is coming to these texts for the first time. Michael Heyes, Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions There is something thrilling for the researcher about working in a library for the first time, familiarizing oneself with its contents, both their riches and their lacunae, figuring out its organizational principles, stumbling upon evidence of past users and important benefactors, and then by ever more extended use, discerning the patterns and trajectory of the library s development over time. . . . As Sophie Page demonstrates in Magic in the Cloister, the thrill is not limited to a summer spent in a scrupulously maintained Fachbibliothek at a twenty-first-century university institute, but can also be won through a more constructed visit to a library in the distant past. The library in question in Magic in the Cloister is the late-medieval library of the Abbey of St. Augustine in Canterbury, especially its collection of learned magic. . . . Magic in the Cloister is a stimulating work: its research is meticulous, its insights compelling, and its prose limpid. For this reviewer, the first visit to the library of St. Augustine s was thrilling indeed. David J. Collins, S.J., Catholic Historical Review Magic in the Cloister offers a fascinating picture of learned monks reading and even putting into practice magical texts that were kept in the library of their monastery. St. Augustine's, Canterbury, offered not only a haven for prayer but also a laboratory for occult activity. Charles Burnett, The Warburg Institute, University of London School of Advanced Study In addition to exploring manuscripts and their contents in detail, Magic in the Cloister is original in its focus on a known group of men who owned and read these books and perhaps tried out some of the rituals in them. This is unusual because many manuscripts of magical texts have been lost, or we do not know who owned them. The book therefore presents much new information about the readers of magical texts. It also approaches this issue from a new angle. Sophie Page shows that magical texts could appeal to people who were part of the religious establishment (monks in a wealthy monastery) and who had a monastic vocation. Catherine Rider, University of Exeter


Page contextualizes licit and illicit forms of magic and the reasons for their classification in the medieval mind, focusing upon magical practice in the monastery. Each chapter is thoroughly researched enough to be of interest to the specialist in the field but also provides enough details regarding the texts and concepts in question to appeal to the non-specialist as well. . . . Magic in the Cloister is well worth the read, particularly for the academic audience who is coming to these texts for the first time. Michael Heyes, Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions


In addition to exploring manuscripts and their contents in detail, Magic in the Cloister is original in its focus on a known group of men who owned and read these books and perhaps tried out some of the rituals in them. This is unusual because many manuscripts of magical texts have been lost, or we do not know who owned them. The book therefore presents much new information about the readers of magical texts. It also approaches this issue from a new angle. Sophie Page shows that magical texts could appeal to people who were part of the religious establishment (monks in a wealthy monastery) and who had a monastic vocation. Catherine Rider, University of Exeter There is something thrilling for the researcher about working in a library for the first time, familiarizing oneself with its contents, both their riches and their lacunae, figuring out its organizational principles, stumbling upon evidence of past users and important benefactors, and then by ever more extended use, discerning the patterns and trajectory of the library s development over time. . . . As Sophie Page demonstrates in Magic in the Cloister, the thrill is not limited to a summer spent in a scrupulously maintained Fachbibliothek at a twenty-first-century university institute, but can also be won through a more constructed visit to a library in the distant past. The library in question in Magic in the Cloister is the late-medieval library of the Abbey of St. Augustine in Canterbury, especially its collection of learned magic. . . . Magic in the Cloister is a stimulating work: its research is meticulous, its insights compelling, and its prose limpid. For this reviewer, the first visit to the library of St. Augustine s was thrilling indeed. David J. Collins, S.J., Catholic Historical Review Magic in the Cloister offers a fascinating picture of learned monks reading and even putting into practice magical texts that were kept in the library of their monastery. St. Augustine's, Canterbury, offered not only a haven for prayer but also a laboratory for occult activity. Charles Burnett, The Warburg Institute, University of London School of Advanced Study Page contextualizes licit and illicit forms of magic and the reasons for their classification in the medieval mind, focusing upon magical practice in the monastery. Each chapter is thoroughly researched enough to be of interest to the specialist in the field but also provides enough details regarding the texts and concepts in question to appeal to the non-specialist as well. . . . Magic in the Cloister is well worth the read, particularly for the academic audience who is coming to these texts for the first time. Michael Heyes, Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions All histories have limits, but the core of this study is full of rich detail and judicious analysis. Page deftly illuminates not just the contents of a major library of medieval magic but also the intriguing intellectual and spiritual contexts in which it took shape. --Michael D. Bailey, American Historical Review An important contribution to the recent wave of scholarship on the history of European magic. . . . Page's portrayal of monasteries as centres of magic puts us in a much better position to assess the complicated institutional context of 'magical' heteropraxy. --Egil Asprem, Pomegranate: The International Journal of Pagan Studies Engages from the start. . . . Delivers beautifully clear guidance through a complex and technical body of material. --Anne Lawrence-Mathers, Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies Page's work marks a significant contribution to an emerging area of the study of the history of magic, one that has the potential to bridge a gap between what we know of magical texts, and what we can infer about magical readers and practitioners. As such, it has earned a welcome place in my own magical library at home. --Nancy Mandeville Caciola, Renaissance Quarterly Sophie Page's insightful and absorbing contribution to the study of Western learned magic brings together many strands that comprise 'approaches to the medieval universe' to focus on the place of magic within it; and in so doing, she demonstrates how the monks at St. Augustine's were able to incorporate the study of magic into their traditionally Christian view of the world. --Elizabeth Wade-Sirabian, Preternature Page contextualizes licit and illicit forms of magic and the reasons for their classification in the medieval mind, focusing upon magical practice in the monastery. Each chapter is thoroughly researched enough to be of interest to the specialist in the field but also provides enough details regarding the texts and concepts in question to appeal to the non-specialist as well.. . . Magic in the Cloister is well worth the read, particularly for the academic audience who is coming to these texts for the first time. --Michael Heyes, Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions There is something thrilling for the researcher about working in a library for the first time, familiarizing oneself with its contents, both their riches and their lacunae, figuring out its organizational principles, stumbling upon evidence of past users and important benefactors, and then by ever more extended use, discerning the patterns and trajectory of the library's development over time. . . . As Sophie Page demonstrates in Magic in the Cloister, the thrill is not limited to a summer spent in a scrupulously maintained Fachbibliothek at a twenty-first-century university institute, but can also be won through a more constructed visit to a library in the distant past. The library in question in Magic in the Cloister is the late-medieval library of the Abbey of St. Augustine in Canterbury, especially its collection of learned magic. . . . Magic in the Cloister is a stimulating work: its research is meticulous, its insights compelling, and its prose limpid. For this reviewer, the first visit to the library of St. Augustine's was thrilling indeed. --David J. Collins, S.J., Catholic Historical Review Magic in the Cloister offers a fascinating picture of learned monks reading and even putting into practice magical texts that were kept in the library of their monastery. St. Augustine's, Canterbury, offered not only a haven for prayer but also a laboratory for occult activity. --Charles Burnett, The Warburg Institute, University of London--School of Advanced Study In addition to exploring manuscripts and their contents in detail, Magic in the Cloister is original in its focus on a known group of men who owned and read these books and perhaps tried out some of the rituals in them. This is unusual because many manuscripts of magical texts have been lost, or we do not know who owned them. The book therefore presents much new information about the readers of magical texts. It also approaches this issue from a new angle. Sophie Page shows that magical texts could appeal to people who were part of the religious establishment (monks in a wealthy monastery) and who had a monastic vocation. --Catherine Rider, University of Exeter Page s work marks a signi cant contribution to an emerging area of the study of the history of magic, one that has the potential to bridge a gap between what we know of magical texts, and what we can infer about magical readers and practitioners. As such, it has earned a welcome place in my own magical library at home. Nancy Mandeville Caciola, Renaissance Quarterly Sophie Page s insightful and absorbing contribution to the study of Western learned magic brings together many strands that comprise approaches to the medieval universe to focus on the place of magic within it; and in so doing, she demonstrates how the monks at St. Augustine s were able to incorporate the study of magic into their traditionally Christian view of the world. Elizabeth Wade-Sirabian, Preternature Page contextualizes licit and illicit forms of magic and the reasons for their classification in the medieval mind, focusing upon magical practice in the monastery. Each chapter is thoroughly researched enough to be of interest to the specialist in the field but also provides enough details regarding the texts and concepts in question to appeal to the non-specialist as well. . . . Magic in the Cloister is well worth the read, particularly for the academic audience who is coming to these texts for the first time. Michael Heyes, Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions There is something thrilling for the researcher about working in a library for the first time, familiarizing oneself with its contents, both their riches and their lacunae, figuring out its organizational principles, stumbling upon evidence of past users and important benefactors, and then by ever more extended use, discerning the patterns and trajectory of the library s development over time. . . . As Sophie Page demonstrates in Magic in the Cloister, the thrill is not limited to a summer spent in a scrupulously maintained Fachbibliothek at a twenty-first-century university institute, but can also be won through a more constructed visit to a library in the distant past. The library in question in Magic in the Cloister is the late-medieval library of the Abbey of St. Augustine in Canterbury, especially its collection of learned magic. . . . Magic in the Cloister is a stimulating work: its research is meticulous, its insights compelling, and its prose limpid. For this reviewer, the first visit to the library of St. Augustine s was thrilling indeed. David J. Collins, S.J., Catholic Historical Review Magic in the Cloister offers a fascinating picture of learned monks reading and even putting into practice magical texts that were kept in the library of their monastery. St. Augustine's, Canterbury, offered not only a haven for prayer but also a laboratory for occult activity. Charles Burnett, The Warburg Institute, University of London School of Advanced Study In addition to exploring manuscripts and their contents in detail, Magic in the Cloister is original in its focus on a known group of men who owned and read these books and perhaps tried out some of the rituals in them. This is unusual because many manuscripts of magical texts have been lost, or we do not know who owned them. The book therefore presents much new information about the readers of magical texts. It also approaches this issue from a new angle. Sophie Page shows that magical texts could appeal to people who were part of the religious establishment (monks in a wealthy monastery) and who had a monastic vocation. Catherine Rider, University of Exeter Sophie Page s insightful and absorbing contribution to the study of Western learned magic brings together many strands that comprise approaches to the medieval universe to focus on the place of magic within it; and in so doing, she demonstrates how the monks at St. Augustine s were able to incorporate the study of magic into their traditionally Christian view of the world. Elizabeth Wade-Sirabian, Preternature Page contextualizes licit and illicit forms of magic and the reasons for their classification in the medieval mind, focusing upon magical practice in the monastery. Each chapter is thoroughly researched enough to be of interest to the specialist in the field but also provides enough details regarding the texts and concepts in question to appeal to the non-specialist as well. . . . Magic in the Cloister is well worth the read, particularly for the academic audience who is coming to these texts for the first time. Michael Heyes, Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions There is something thrilling for the researcher about working in a library for the first time, familiarizing oneself with its contents, both their riches and their lacunae, figuring out its organizational principles, stumbling upon evidence of past users and important benefactors, and then by ever more extended use, discerning the patterns and trajectory of the library s development over time. . . . As Sophie Page demonstrates in Magic in the Cloister, the thrill is not limited to a summer spent in a scrupulously maintained Fachbibliothek at a twenty-first-century university institute, but can also be won through a more constructed visit to a library in the distant past. The library in question in Magic in the Cloister is the late-medieval library of the Abbey of St. Augustine in Canterbury, especially its collection of learned magic. . . . Magic in the Cloister is a stimulating work: its research is meticulous, its insights compelling, and its prose limpid. For this reviewer, the first visit to the library of St. Augustine s was thrilling indeed. David J. Collins, S.J., Catholic Historical Review Magic in the Cloister offers a fascinating picture of learned monks reading and even putting into practice magical texts that were kept in the library of their monastery. St. Augustine's, Canterbury, offered not only a haven for prayer but also a laboratory for occult activity. Charles Burnett, The Warburg Institute, University of London School of Advanced Study In addition to exploring manuscripts and their contents in detail, Magic in the Cloister is original in its focus on a known group of men who owned and read these books and perhaps tried out some of the rituals in them. This is unusual because many manuscripts of magical texts have been lost, or we do not know who owned them. The book therefore presents much new information about the readers of magical texts. It also approaches this issue from a new angle. Sophie Page shows that magical texts could appeal to people who were part of the religious establishment (monks in a wealthy monastery) and who had a monastic vocation. Catherine Rider, University of Exeter


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Sophie Page is a lecturer at University College London, UK.

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