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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Kenneth Baxter Wolf (John Sutton Miner Professor of History, John Sutton Miner Professor of History, Pomona College)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 23.60cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 16.30cm Weight: 0.471kg ISBN: 9780199732586ISBN 10: 0199732582 Pages: 248 Publication Date: 27 January 2011 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsPreliminaries: ; On the Translations ; Acknowledgments ; Critical Editions of Translated Texts ; Introduction ; Essays: ; The Afterlife of St. Elizabeth ; The Life of St. Elizabeth ; Sources: ; The Miracle List (August 1232) ; Conrad of Marburg, Summa vitae (1232) ; Miracle Depositions from the First Papal Commission (1233) ; Miracle Depositions from the Second Papal Commission (1235) ; Dicta quatuor ancillarum (1235) ; Select Bibliography ; IndexReviews"""St. Elizabeth of Thuringia provides us with a penetrating insight into the anguish and joy of medieval people. Kenneth Baxter Wolf's commentary and lucid translation of the canonization records of St. Elizabeth are priceless relics, providing an invaluable catalogue of social information about the penitents, their age, gender, occupation, descriptions of their illness, their cure, and their responses to the cure. This volume advances the study of hagiography and the popular imagination and deepens our understanding of the construction of medieval sainthood."" --Thomas J. Heffernan, Kenneth Curry Professor of Humanities, University of Tennessee ""Wolf's substantial, engaging, and capacious introduction and his lively and meticulous translation of the canonization brief for St. Elizabeth of Thuringia constitute a remarkable piece of scholarship. Both the introduction and the translation offer to historians and lay readers alike an invaluable and unique perspective on the diverse processes through which sainthood was constructed and on late medieval mentality and culture. This is a most valuable and welcome contribution to our understanding of medieval sanctity and of the religious sensibilities of men and human in the medieval West in the wake of St. Francis's life and preaching."" --Teofilo F. Ruiz, Professor of History, University of California, Los Angeles ""The inquest into the canonization of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary produced some of the Middle Ages' richest sources concerning the life and deeds of a holy woman and the ordinary people who turned to her for help. Canonization inquests, written in Latin and often unpublished, are usually accessible only to professional medievalists. Ken Wolf's lucid translation now makes them available for the first time in English. His insightful introduction unravels the various influences that helped to shape Elizabeth's piety and the layers of conscious and unconscious editing that molded both the questions and the responses that produced the written testimony concerning her piety. Similarly, his discussion of the sick people who sought physical succor by appealing to Elizabeth after her death elucidates our understanding of the personal and collective rituals that were an integral part of medieval religious life."" --Sharon Farmer, Professor of History, University of California, Santa Barbara" St. Elizabeth of Thuringia provides us with a penetrating insight into the anguish and joy of medieval people. Kenneth Baxter Wolf's commentary and lucid translation of the canonization records of St. Elizabeth are priceless relics, providing an invaluable catalogue of social information about the penitents, their age, gender, occupation, descriptions of their illness, their cure, and their responses to the cure. This volume advances the study of hagiography and the popular imagination and deepens our understanding of the construction of medieval sainthood. * Thomas J. Heffernan, Kenneth Curry Professor of Humanities, University of Tennessee * <br> St. Elizabeth of Thuringia provides us with a penetrating insight into the anguish and joy of medieval people. Kenneth Baxter Wolf's commentary and lucid translation of the canonization records of St. Elizabeth are priceless relics, providing an invaluable catalogue of social information about the penitents, their age, gender, occupation, descriptions of their illness, their cure, and their responses to the cure. This volume advances the study of hagiography and the popular imagination and deepens our understanding of the construction of medieval sainthood. --Thomas J. Heffernan, Kenneth Curry Professor of Humanities, University of Tennessee <br><p><br> Wolf's substantial, engaging, and capacious introduction and his lively and meticulous translation of the canonization brief for St. Elizabeth of Thuringia constitute a remarkable piece of scholarship. Both the introduction and the translation offer to historians and lay readers alike an invaluable and unique perspective on the diverse processes through which sainthood was constructed and on late medieval mentality and culture. This is a most valuable and welcome contribution to our understanding of medieval sanctity and of the religious sensibilities of men and human in the medieval West in the wake of St. Francis's life and preaching. --Teofilo F. Ruiz, Professor of History, University of California, Los Angeles <br><p><br> The inquest into the canonization of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary produced some of the Middle Ages' richest sources concerning the life and deeds of a holy woman and the ordinary people who turned to her for help. Canonization inquests, written in Latin and often unpublished, are usually accessible only to professional medievalists. Ken Wolf's lucid translation now makes them available for the first time in English. His insightful introduction unravels the various influences that helped to shape Elizabeth's piety and the layers of conscious and unconscious editing that molded both the quest <br> St. Elizabeth of Thuringia provides us with a penetrating insight into the anguish and joy of medieval people. Kenneth Baxter Wolf's commentary and lucid translation of the canonization records of St. Elizabeth are priceless relics, providing an invaluable catalogue of social information about the penitents, their age, gender, occupation, descriptions of their illness, their cure, and their responses to the cure. This volume advances the study of hagiography and the popular imagination and deepens our understanding of the construction of medieval sainthood. --Thomas J. Heffernan, Kenneth Curry Professor of Humanities, University of Tennessee <br> Wolf's substantial, engaging, and capacious introduction and his lively and meticulous translation of the canonization brief for St. Elizabeth of Thuringia constitute a remarkable piece of scholarship. Both the introduction and the translation offer to historians and lay readers alike an invaluable and unique perspective on the diver Author InformationAssociate Dean and John Sutton Miner Professor of History, Pomona College Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |