A Small Sound of the Trumpet: Women in Medieval LifeDescribes the daily life of noblewomen, nuns, and peasants in feudal England and Europe, looks at the treatment of lepers, begars, prostitutes, and criminals, and offers brief profiles of prominent medieval women |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 19
Page 107
The Cistercian general chapter disliked this and made various attempts to
disavow any official responsibility for nuns, but nunneries following the Cistercian
rule continued to proliferate. Occasionally they were very grand indeed, such as
the ...
The Cistercian general chapter disliked this and made various attempts to
disavow any official responsibility for nuns, but nunneries following the Cistercian
rule continued to proliferate. Occasionally they were very grand indeed, such as
the ...
Page 115
They were a fruit of urban society, as the great Benedictine and Cistercian
abbeys had been characteristic of a society rooted in the countryside.
Beguinages sprung up during the twelfth century in the diocese of Liege and
spread to the nearby ...
They were a fruit of urban society, as the great Benedictine and Cistercian
abbeys had been characteristic of a society rooted in the countryside.
Beguinages sprung up during the twelfth century in the diocese of Liege and
spread to the nearby ...
Page 123
She had importuned her brother for some time for such advice but, as a
Cistercian. Aelred had been inhibited by the growing Cistercian unwillingness to
undertake direction of or responsibility for female religious. His sister's cell was
probably ...
She had importuned her brother for some time for such advice but, as a
Cistercian. Aelred had been inhibited by the growing Cistercian unwillingness to
undertake direction of or responsibility for female religious. His sister's cell was
probably ...
What people are saying - Write a review
A small sound of the trumpet: women in medieval life
User Review - Not Available - Book VerdictThis excellent synthesis of contemporary literature explores the activities of women at all social levels in France, England, the Low Countries, and Germany between 1100 and 1500: queens and noble ... Read full review
Contents
The Precursors | 1 |
The Mould for Medieval Women | 18 |
Queens | 44 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abbess abbey abbot active Agnes Alice allowed became beguines bishop Blanche Blanche of Castile British Library brother Cathars Charles childbirth Christine de Pizan Christine's chronicler church Cistercian clerical convent countess court crusade daughter death Dhuoda died early ecclesiastical Edward Eleanor Elizabeth emphasis encouraged England English father female fifteenth century fourteenth century France French girls heir Henry Hildegard Hildegard of Bingen hospital household husband important influence insisted Isabella Jeanne king king's lands later lepers lives livres Lollard London Louis Mahaut male manor Margery Margery Kempe Marguerite Marie marriage married Matthew Paris medicine medieval medieval women Middle Ages mother mystics noble ladies nunnery nuns occasionally officials Oignies Paris peasant piety practical prioress prostitutes queen Radegund recluse recognised religious responsibility rich royal rule secular servants sick sisters social suggests thirteenth century trade trans treatise twelfth century widow wife wives woman wrote young