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Profiles of Anabaptist women
Authors: ---
ISBN: 1554587905 1280925949 9786610925940 0889206031 9780889206038 9781554587902 9781280925948 9780889202771 088920277X 6610925941 Year: 1996 Volume: 3 Publisher: Waterloo, Ont. Published for the Canadian Corp. for Studies in Religion by Wilfrid Laurier University Press

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Abstract

Examines women who chose to risk persecution and martyrdom to pursue the radical Protestant movement during the Reformation. Most of the 34 essays focus on a single woman, but others discuss such groups as women in the Hutterite song book, women in Tiron who recanted, and women leaders in Augsburg.

Autobiography of an aspiring saint
Authors: ---
ISBN: 1281125601 9786611125608 0226244482 9780226244488 9780226244464 0226244466 0226244466 0226244474 9780226244471 9780226244488 Year: 1996 Publisher: Chicago : University of Chicago Press,

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Abstract

Charged by the Venetian Inquisition with the conscious and cynical feigning of holiness, Cecelia Ferrazzi (1609-1684) requested and obtained the unprecedented opportunity to defend herself through a presentation of her life story. Ferrazzi's unique inquisitorial autobiography and the transcripts of her preceding testimony, expertly transcribed and eloquently translated into English, allow us to enter an unfamiliar sector of the past and hear 'another voice'-that of a humble Venetian woman who had extraordinary experiences and exhibited exceptional courage. Born in 1609 into an artisan family, Cecilia Ferrazzi wanted to become a nun. When her parents' death in the plague of 1630 made it financially impossible for her to enter the convent, she refused to marry and as a single laywoman set out in pursuit of holiness. Eventually she improvised a vocation: running houses of refuge for "girls in danger," young women at risk of being lured into prostitution. Ferrazzi's frequent visions persuaded her, as well as some clerics and acquaintances among the Venetian elite, that she was on the right track. The socially valuable service she was providing enhanced this impresssion. Not everyone, however, was convinced that she was a genuine favorite of God. In 1664 she was denounced to the Inquisition. The Inquisition convicted Ferrazzi of the pretense of sanctity. Yet her autobiographical act permits us to see in vivid detail both the opportunities and the obstacles presented to seventeenth-century women.

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