Bibliography

Clayton, Mary, “Centralism and uniformity or localism and diversity: the Virgin and native saints in the English monastic reform”, Peritia 8 (1994): 95–106.

  • journal article
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Article
“Centralism and uniformity or localism and diversity: the Virgin and native saints in the English monastic reform”
Periodical
Volume
8
Pages
95–106
Description
Abstract (cited)

Recent work on the cult of the saints in the late Anglo-Saxon church (Ridyard, Rollason, Clayton) seem to be at variance on the issue of the importance of the cults of the Virgin and those of the native saints. This is an attempt to read the cult of the Virgin against those of other saints, exploring similarities and differences in the ways in which the cults developed and by whom, and to demonstrate that the cult of Mary functioned as a symbol of solidarity and corporate unity in the Benedictine reform period. This ideal did not last long, however, and its breakdown is mirrored in a movement towards local cults.

Subjects and topics
Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
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April 2013, last updated: July 2021