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Old English literature --- Christian pastoral theology --- Engelse sermoenen [Middel-] --- English sermons [Middle ] --- Middel-Engelse sermoenen --- Middle English sermons --- Sermoenen [Engelse ] (Middel) --- Sermoenen [Middel-Engelse ] --- Sermons [English ] (Middle English, 1100-1500) --- Sermons [English ] (Middle) --- Sermons [Middle English ] --- Sermons anglais (Moyen) --- Sermons moyen-anglais --- 289.921 --- 091 <41 LONDON> --- 091 <41 OXFORD> --- 091 <41 MANCHESTER> --- Lollards --- -Poor priests --- Wiclifites --- Wyclifites --- Lollarden --- Handschriftenkunde. Handschriftencatalogi--Verenigd Koninkrijk van Groot-Brittannië en Noord-Ierland--LONDON --- Handschriftenkunde. Handschriftencatalogi--Verenigd Koninkrijk van Groot-Brittannië en Noord-Ierland--OXFORD --- Handschriftenkunde. Handschriftencatalogi--Verenigd Koninkrijk van Groot-Brittannië en Noord-Ierland--MANCHESTER --- Sermons --- Sermons. --- -Lollarden --- 091 <41 MANCHESTER> Handschriftenkunde. Handschriftencatalogi--Verenigd Koninkrijk van Groot-Brittannië en Noord-Ierland--MANCHESTER --- 091 <41 OXFORD> Handschriftenkunde. Handschriftencatalogi--Verenigd Koninkrijk van Groot-Brittannië en Noord-Ierland--OXFORD --- 091 <41 LONDON> Handschriftenkunde. Handschriftencatalogi--Verenigd Koninkrijk van Groot-Brittannië en Noord-Ierland--LONDON --- 289.921 Lollarden --- -289.921 Lollarden --- Poor priests --- Sources --- Anglais (langue) --- Sermons anglais --- 1100-1500 (moyen-anglais) --- Edition critique --- 15e siecle
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Lollards --- Sources. --- Sources --- Coventry (England) --- Coventry (Angleterre) --- Church history --- Histoire religieuse --- -289.921 --- 27 <420 COVENTRY> --- 27 <41> "12/15" --- Poor priests --- Wiclifites --- Wyclifites --- Lollarden --- Kerkgeschiedenis--Engeland--COVENTRY --- Kerkgeschiedenis--Verenigd Koninkrijk van Groot-Brittannië en Noord-Ierland--?"12/15" --- -Church history --- -Lollards --- 289.921 Lollarden --- EPUB-LIV-FT EPUB-ALPHA-L LIVHISTO --- 289.921 --- Coventry, Eng. --- Coventry (West Midlands, England) --- City and Borough of Coventry (England) --- Lollards - Sources --- Coventry --- Coventry (England) - Church history - Sources
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Lollards --- Wycliffe, John, --- England --- Angleterre --- Church history --- Histoire religieuse --- 27 <420> "10/14" --- 284.3 --- 289.921 --- Poor priests --- Wiclifites --- Wyclifites --- Kerkgeschiedenis--Engeland--?"10/14" --- Hussieten. Hus. Wycliff. Taborieten. Calixtenen. Utramquisten. Horebieten --- Lollarden --- Wycliffe, John --- -27 <420> "10/14" --- 289.921 Lollarden --- 284.3 Hussieten. Hus. Wycliff. Taborieten. Calixtenen. Utramquisten. Horebieten --- Joannes Wyclif --- Joannis Wiclif --- -Lollards --- Vicliffe, John, --- Viklef, Jan, --- Viklef, John, --- Viklif, Jan, --- Wickliffe, John, --- Wiclif, Johann von, --- Wiclif, John, --- Wicliffe, John, --- Wyclif, John, --- Wyclyf, John, --- Wykliffe, Johannes von,
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The philosophical and theological ideas of John Wyclif, their dissemination among clerical and lay audiences, and the movement of religious dissent associated with his name all provoked sharp controversies in late medieval England. This volume brings together the very latest scholarship on Wyclif and Wycliffism, with its contributors exploring in interdisciplinary fashion the historical, literary, and theological resonances of the Wycliffite controversies. Far from adhering to the traditional binary divide between ‘orthodoxy’ and ‘heresy’ as a tool for explaining the religious turmoil of the late fourteenth, fifteenth, and early sixteenth centuries, essays here explore the construction and rhetorical use of those terms, collectively producing a more nuanced account of the religious history of pre-Reformation England. Topics include the use of religious lyrics and tables of lessons as indirect rebuttals of Wycliffite claims; the social networks through which dissenters transmitted their ideas; dissenting and mainstream readings of Scripture; the ‘survival’ of Wycliffism in the run-up to Henry VIII’s reformation; and the fate of Wyclif and Wycliffism in later historiography. Leading contributors include Anne Hudson, Alastair Minnis, and Peter Marshall.
Lollards --- Poor priests --- Wiclifites --- Wyclifites --- Hérésies chrétiennes --- Actes de congrès --- Wycliffe, John, --- Wycliffe, John --- Christian heresies --- History --- Middle Ages, 600-1500 --- Church history --- Actes de congrès. --- Middle Ages, 500-1500 --- Reformation --- Dissenters, Religious --- Heresies, Christian --- Heresies and heretics --- Heresy --- Theology, Doctrinal --- Christian sects --- Protestant Reformation --- Counter-Reformation --- Protestantism --- Believers' church --- Conformity (Religion) --- Nonconformists, Religious --- Nonconformity (Religion) --- Protestant dissenters --- Separatism (Religion) --- Congregationalism --- Dissenters --- Established churches --- Free churches --- Liberty of conscience --- Sects --- Early movements --- Vicliffe, John, --- Viklef, Jan, --- Viklef, John, --- Viklif, Jan, --- Wickliffe, John, --- Wiclif, Johann von, --- Wiclif, John, --- Wicliffe, John, --- Wyclif, John, --- Wyclyf, John, --- Wykliffe, Johannes von, --- England --- Angleterre --- Anglii︠a︡ --- Inghilterra --- Engeland --- Inglaterra --- Anglija --- England and Wales
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This study examines expectations of imminent judgment that energized reform movements in Late Medieval and Reformation Europe. It probes the apocalyptic vision of the Lollards, followers of the Oxford professor John Wycliff (1384). The Lollards repudiated the medieval church and established conventicles despite officially sanctioned prosecution. While exploring the full spectrum of late medieval apocalypticism, this work focuses on the diverse range of Wycliffite literature, political and religious treatises, sermons, biblical commentaries, including trial records, to reveal a dynamic strain of apocalyptic discourse. It shows that sixteenth-century English apocalypticism was fed by vibrant, indigenous Wycliffite well springs. The rhetoric of Lollard apocalypticism is analyzed and its effect on carriers and audiences is investigated, illuminating the rise of evil in church and society as perceived by the Lollards and their radical reform program.
Lollards --- Antichrist --- Millennialism --- Apocalyptic literature --- Antéchrist --- Littérature apocalyptique --- History. --- History of doctrines. --- History and criticism --- Histoire --- Histoire des doctrines --- Histoire et critique --- England --- Angleterre --- Church history --- Histoire religieuse --- History of doctrines --- 289.921 --- 236.92 --- -Millennialism --- -Apocalyptic literature --- -Lollards --- Poor priests --- Wiclifites --- Wyclifites --- Literature, Apocalyptic --- Literature --- Amillennialism --- Chiliasm --- Millenarianism --- Millennianism --- Postmillennialism --- Premillennialism --- Dispensationalism --- Fundamentalism --- Millennium (Eschatology) --- Eschatology --- Lollarden --- Anti-Christ; Antichrist --- Christianity --- -Church history --- -289.921 --- 236.92 Anti-Christ; Antichrist --- 289.921 Lollarden --- Antéchrist --- Littérature apocalyptique --- Apocalyptic literature - History and criticism --- Millennialism - England - History of doctrines --- Antichrist - History of doctrines --- England - Church history - 1066-1485 --- England - Church history - 16th century
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This book is about the place of pedagogy and the role of intellectuals in medieval dissent. Focusing on the medieval English heresy known as Lollardy, Rita Copeland places heretical and orthodox attitudes to learning in a long historical perspective that reaches back to antiquity. She shows how educational ideologies of ancient lineage left their imprint on the most sharply politicized categories of late medieval culture, and how radical teachers transformed inherited ideas about classrooms and pedagogy as they brought their teaching to adult learners. The pedagogical imperatives of Lollard dissent were also embodied in the work of certain public figures, intellectuals whose dissident careers transformed the social category of the medieval intellectual. Looking closely at the prison narratives of two Lollard preachers, Copeland shows how their writings could serve as examples for their fellow dissidents and forge a new rapport between academic and non-academic communities.
Education, Medieval --- Reformation --- Lollards. --- Poor priests --- Wiclifites --- Wyclifites --- Pre-Reformation --- Christian sects, Medieval --- Church history --- Education --- Medieval education --- Seven liberal arts --- Civilization, Medieval --- Learning and scholarship --- Early movements. --- History --- Great Britain --- Intellectual life --- Lollards --- 289.921 --- 378.4 <41> --- 289.921 Lollarden --- Lollarden --- 378.4 <41> Universiteiten--Verenigd Koninkrijk van Groot-Brittannië en Noord-Ierland --- Universiteiten--Verenigd Koninkrijk van Groot-Brittannië en Noord-Ierland --- Early movements --- History of education and educational sciences --- History of civilization --- History of the United Kingdom and Ireland --- anno 1200-1499 --- Geschiedenis van opvoeding en onderwijs --- handboeken en inleidingen. --- Arts and Humanities --- Literature --- Handboeken en inleidingen.
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Kantik Ghosh argues that one of the main reasons for Lollardy's sensational resonance for its times, and for its immediate posterity, was its exposure of fundamental problems in late medieval academic engagement with the Bible, its authority and its polemical uses. Examining Latin and English sources, Ghosh shows how the same debates over biblical hermeneutics and associated methodologies were from the 1380s onwards conducted both within and outside the traditional university framework, and how by eliding boundaries between Latinate biblical speculation and vernacular religiosity Lollardy changed the cultural and political positioning of both. Covering a wide range of texts - scholastic and extramural, in Latin and in English, written over half a century from Wyclif to Thomas Netter - Ghosh concludes that by the first decades of the fifteenth century Lollardy had partly won the day. Whatever its fate as a religious movement, it had successfully changed the intellectual landscape of England.
Lollards --- 284.3 --- 284.3 Hussieten. Hus. Wycliff. Taborieten. Calixtenen. Utramquisten. Horebieten --- Hussieten. Hus. Wycliff. Taborieten. Calixtenen. Utramquisten. Horebieten --- Poor priests --- Wiclifites --- Wyclifites --- Wycliffe, John, --- Vicliffe, John, --- Viklef, Jan, --- Viklef, John, --- Viklif, Jan, --- Wickliffe, John, --- Wiclif, Johann von, --- Wiclif, John, --- Wicliffe, John, --- Wyclif, John, --- Wyclyf, John, --- Wykliffe, Johannes von, --- Biblia --- Bible --- Criticism, interpretation, etc. --- History --- Evidences, authority, etc. --- History of doctrines. --- Lollards. --- Views on the authority of scripture. --- Arts and Humanities --- Literature --- late-medieval academic engagement with the Bible --- biblical hermeneutics --- Lollardy --- religious movements
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The Opus arduum valde is a Latin commentary on the Book of Revelation, written in England by an unknown scholarly author in the years 1389-1390. The book originated from the early Wycliffite movement and reflects its experience of persecution in apocalyptic terms. In England it soon fell into oblivion, but was adopted by radical exponents of the fifteenth-century Bohemian Hussites. In the sixteenth century Luther obtained a copy of the Opus arduum valde which he had printed in Wittenberg with his own preface in 1528. This remarkable document of religious dissent in late medieval Europe, highly regarded in Lollard and Hussite studies, is now for the first time made available in a critical edition.
Lollards. --- Bible. --- Criticism, interpretation, etc. --- History --- Lollards --- Poor priests --- Wiclifites --- Wyclifites --- Abūghālimsīs --- Apocalipse (Book of the New Testament) --- Apocalisse (Book of the New Testament) --- Apocalypse (Book of the New Testament) --- Apocalypse of John --- Apocalypse of St. John --- Apocalypsis Johannis --- Apocalypsis S. Johannis --- Apokalypse (Book of the New Testament) --- Apokalypsin --- Book of Revelation --- Johannes-Apokalypse --- Johannesapokalypse --- Johannesoffenbarung --- Offenbarung des Johannes --- Revelation (Book of the New Testament) --- Revelation of St. John --- Revelation of St. John the Divine --- Revelation to John --- Ruʼyā (Book of the New Testament) --- Sifr al-Ruʼyā --- Yohan kyesirok --- Apokalipsa św. Jana --- Apokalipsa świętego Jana
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284.3 --- 289.921 --- 091:289.921 --- 094:289.921 --- 091 <41> --- Lollards --- Religious thought --- -Books and reading --- -Appraisal of books --- Books --- Choice of books --- Evaluation of literature --- Literature --- Reading, Choice of --- Reading and books --- Reading habits --- Reading public --- Reading --- Reading interests --- Reading promotion --- Religion --- Poor priests --- Wiclifites --- Wyclifites --- Hussieten. Hus. Wycliff. Taborieten. Calixtenen. Utramquisten. Horebieten --- Lollarden --- Handschriftenkunde. Handschriftencatalogi-:-Lollarden --- Oude en merkwaardige drukken. Kostbare en zeldzame boeken. Preciosa en rariora-:-Lollarden --- Handschriftenkunde. Handschriftencatalogi--Verenigd Koninkrijk van Groot-Brittannië en Noord-Ierland --- History --- -Appraisal --- Evaluation --- Wycliffe, John --- -Hussieten. Hus. Wycliff. Taborieten. Calixtenen. Utramquisten. Horebieten --- -Wycliffe, John --- -094:289.921 Oude en merkwaardige drukken. Kostbare en zeldzame boeken. Preciosa en rariora-:-Lollarden --- 091:289.921 Handschriftenkunde. Handschriftencatalogi-:-Lollarden --- 289.921 Lollarden --- 284.3 Hussieten. Hus. Wycliff. Taborieten. Calixtenen. Utramquisten. Horebieten --- Appraisal of books --- 091 <41> Handschriftenkunde. Handschriftencatalogi--Verenigd Koninkrijk van Groot-Brittannië en Noord-Ierland --- Joannes Wyclif --- Joannis Wiclif --- -289.921 Lollarden --- 094:289.921 Oude en merkwaardige drukken. Kostbare en zeldzame boeken. Preciosa en rariora-:-Lollarden --- -Poor priests --- Books and reading --- Church history --- Theology, Doctrinal --- Wycliffe, John, --- Vicliffe, John, --- Viklef, Jan, --- Viklef, John, --- Viklif, Jan, --- Wickliffe, John, --- Wiclif, Johann von, --- Wiclif, John, --- Wicliffe, John, --- Wyclif, John, --- Wyclyf, John, --- Wykliffe, Johannes von, --- LOLLARDS --- WYCLIFFE (JOHN), d. 1384 --- ADDRESSES, ESSAYS, LECTURES
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This is the first book-length study of the influential cultural and religious exchanges which took place between England and Bohemia following Richard II's marriage to Anne of Bohemia in 1382. The ensuing growth in communication between the two kingdoms initially enabled new ideas of religion to flourish in both countries but eventually led the English authorities to suppress heresy. This exciting project has been made possible by the discovery of new manuscripts after the opening up of Czech archives over the past twenty years. It is the only study to analyze the Lollard-Hussite exchange with an eye to the new opportunities for international travel and correspondence to which the Great Schism gave rise, and examines how the use of propaganda and The Council of Constance brought an end to this communication by securing the condemnation of heretics such as John Wyclif.
Christian church history --- Literature --- anno 1200-1499 --- Great Britain --- Reformation --- Church history --- Lollards. --- Hussites. --- Réforme (Christianisme) --- Eglise --- Lollards --- Hussites --- Early movements. --- Origines --- Histoire --- England --- Bohemia (Czech Republic) --- Angleterre --- Bohême (République tchèque) --- Histoire religieuse --- -Church history --- -Lollards. --- 27 <437> "04/14" --- 284.3 --- 289.921 --- Christian sects, Medieval --- Poor priests --- Wiclifites --- Wyclifites --- Christianity --- Ecclesiastical history --- History, Church --- History, Ecclesiastical --- History --- Protestant Reformation --- Counter-Reformation --- Protestantism --- Kerkgeschiedenis--Tsjechoslowakije--"04/14" --- Hussieten. Hus. Wycliff. Taborieten. Calixtenen. Utramquisten. Horebieten --- Lollarden --- -Bohemia --- Bohemia (Czechoslovakia) --- Böhmen (Czech Republic) --- Čechy (Czech Republic) --- Czechy (Czech Republic) --- -Reformation --- 289.921 Lollarden --- 284.3 Hussieten. Hus. Wycliff. Taborieten. Calixtenen. Utramquisten. Horebieten --- -Christian church history --- Réforme (Christianisme) --- Bohême (République tchèque) --- Pre-Reformation --- Early movements --- Middle Ages, 600-1500 --- Anglii︠a︡ --- Inghilterra --- Engeland --- Inglaterra --- Anglija --- England and Wales --- Bohemia --- Arts and Humanities