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The Miracles of St. John of Capistran / Stanko Andrić.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Budapest ; New York : Central European University Press, [2022]Copyright date: ©2000Description: 1 online resource (464 p.)Content type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 9789633865408
Subject(s): Other classification:
  • online - DeGruyter
Online resources:
Contents:
Frontmatter -- Contents -- List of figures, tables and maps -- Introduction -- Remark on quoting from the miracle collections -- CHAPTER 1 The road to Ilok -- CHAPTER 2 A portrait of the town -- CHAPTER 3 The death and the corpse -- CHAPTER 4 The beginnings of the canonization campaign, 1456-63 -- CHAPTER 5 The canonization campaign from the 1460s to 1526 -- CHAPTER 6 Capistran as a living miracle-worker -- CHAPTER 7 A morphology of Capistranean posthumous miracles -- CHAPTER 8 Some historical aspects of the miracles post mortem -- Conclusion (Towards a unified theory of miracles) -- Appendix 1 Sources for the history of Capistran's canonization campaign from 1456 to 1526 -- Appendix 2 Selected collations of miracle accounts -- Appendix 3 A class of Capistran's posthumous miracles: liberations from captivity -- Appendix 4 Domiciles of the beneficiaries of Capistran's posthumous miracles -- Selected bibliography -- Index of proper names
Summary: Religious history and, in particular, the history of the cult of saints and their miracles has recently become one of the most popular fields of historical investigation. Together with continuing interest in the related ecclesiastic motivations and the well organized craft of hagiography, this new interest might be explained by the marvellously rich details of thousands of witness accounts testifying to the miraculous help they received from the saint in times of desparate need. These accounts provide an unparalleled insight into the history of everyday life and into the various hardships, illnesses, hopes dreams and anxieties during the late medieval and early modern period. Only two records exist on the history of the medieval Hungarian kingdom- the thirteenth century canonization trial of St. Margaret of Hungary and the miracle collections promoting the canonization of St. John of Capistran, the victorious Crusader at Belgrade in 1456, who died thereafter in Ilok (a city located on the periphery of western Christianity in Croatia). Based on a careful study of the widely scattered manuscripts on Capistranean miracles and with the help of a microscopic philological analysis, the author has managed to reconstruct, for the first time, one of the most complex miracle collections in the history of medieval hagiography. Covering the recording of the first miracle series by the urban notaries of Ilok, the local hagiographer of Ilok Franciscans (John Geszti), the vicar general of the Hungarian province (Stephen Varsányi), and a number of subsequent editions and amplifications of this material recycling into the canonization campaign of St. John of Capistran and the miracles he himself recorded, The Miracles of St. John of Capistran, is an outstanding debut by a representative of a new generation of Central European medievalists.
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Item type Current library Call number URL Status Notes Barcode
eBook eBook Biblioteca "Angelicum" Pont. Univ. S.Tommaso d'Aquino Nuvola online online - DeGruyter (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Online access Not for loan (Accesso limitato) Accesso per gli utenti autorizzati / Access for authorized users (dgr)9789633865408

Frontmatter -- Contents -- List of figures, tables and maps -- Introduction -- Remark on quoting from the miracle collections -- CHAPTER 1 The road to Ilok -- CHAPTER 2 A portrait of the town -- CHAPTER 3 The death and the corpse -- CHAPTER 4 The beginnings of the canonization campaign, 1456-63 -- CHAPTER 5 The canonization campaign from the 1460s to 1526 -- CHAPTER 6 Capistran as a living miracle-worker -- CHAPTER 7 A morphology of Capistranean posthumous miracles -- CHAPTER 8 Some historical aspects of the miracles post mortem -- Conclusion (Towards a unified theory of miracles) -- Appendix 1 Sources for the history of Capistran's canonization campaign from 1456 to 1526 -- Appendix 2 Selected collations of miracle accounts -- Appendix 3 A class of Capistran's posthumous miracles: liberations from captivity -- Appendix 4 Domiciles of the beneficiaries of Capistran's posthumous miracles -- Selected bibliography -- Index of proper names

restricted access online access with authorization star

http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec

Religious history and, in particular, the history of the cult of saints and their miracles has recently become one of the most popular fields of historical investigation. Together with continuing interest in the related ecclesiastic motivations and the well organized craft of hagiography, this new interest might be explained by the marvellously rich details of thousands of witness accounts testifying to the miraculous help they received from the saint in times of desparate need. These accounts provide an unparalleled insight into the history of everyday life and into the various hardships, illnesses, hopes dreams and anxieties during the late medieval and early modern period. Only two records exist on the history of the medieval Hungarian kingdom- the thirteenth century canonization trial of St. Margaret of Hungary and the miracle collections promoting the canonization of St. John of Capistran, the victorious Crusader at Belgrade in 1456, who died thereafter in Ilok (a city located on the periphery of western Christianity in Croatia). Based on a careful study of the widely scattered manuscripts on Capistranean miracles and with the help of a microscopic philological analysis, the author has managed to reconstruct, for the first time, one of the most complex miracle collections in the history of medieval hagiography. Covering the recording of the first miracle series by the urban notaries of Ilok, the local hagiographer of Ilok Franciscans (John Geszti), the vicar general of the Hungarian province (Stephen Varsányi), and a number of subsequent editions and amplifications of this material recycling into the canonization campaign of St. John of Capistran and the miracles he himself recorded, The Miracles of St. John of Capistran, is an outstanding debut by a representative of a new generation of Central European medievalists.

Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.

In English.

Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 29. Jul 2022)