
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction: Sacred Spaces and Places: Constructing the Virgin Mary in Hispanic Literature
- Liturgy and Place
- 1 A Feast of Miracles: Foreign Places, Foreign Spaces in Hispanic Miracle Collections
- Places of Growth and Irrigation
- 2 Hortus conclusus? Virginity and Fruitful Space in Gonzalo de Berceo’s Los Milagros de Nuestra Señora
- 3 Holding and Reflecting the Water of Life in Gonzalo de Berceo’s ‘fuent’: Wellsprings and Fountains as a Figure of the Virgin
- 4 Fountains and their Architecture: Situating Fountains in the Poetry of the Marqués de Santillana and Other Fifteenth-century Poets
- Places of Entry and Exit
- 5 The Temple Gate, the Lions’ Den, and the Furnace: Liminal Spaces in Gonzalo de Berceo’s Marian Poetry
- 6 The Sacred Temple, the Tabernacle, and the Reliquary in the Poetry of Pedro de Santa Fé, Fernán Pérez de Guzmán, Juan Tallante, and Other Late Medieval Poets
- 7 Home is where the Heart is: Christ’s Dwelling Place from Gonzalo de Berceo’s Loores de Nuestra Señora to the Vita Christi of Isabel de Villena
- Spaces of Protection
- 8 Mary as a Strong Defence: The Protective Space of the Virgin from Alfonso X’s Cantigas de Santa Maria to Jaume Roig’s Siege Engine
- 9 ‘Más olías que ambargris’: Perfumed Spaces of the Virgin in Fray Ambrosio Montesino’s Poetry
- Afterword
- Appendix: Peninsular Hymns to the Virgin
- Bibliography
- Index of Places as Marian Figures
- Index of Objects and Containers
- Index of Plants, Medicinal Substances and Perfumes
- General Index
Introduction: Sacred Spaces and Places: Constructing the Virgin Mary in Hispanic Literature
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 August 2020
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction: Sacred Spaces and Places: Constructing the Virgin Mary in Hispanic Literature
- Liturgy and Place
- 1 A Feast of Miracles: Foreign Places, Foreign Spaces in Hispanic Miracle Collections
- Places of Growth and Irrigation
- 2 Hortus conclusus? Virginity and Fruitful Space in Gonzalo de Berceo’s Los Milagros de Nuestra Señora
- 3 Holding and Reflecting the Water of Life in Gonzalo de Berceo’s ‘fuent’: Wellsprings and Fountains as a Figure of the Virgin
- 4 Fountains and their Architecture: Situating Fountains in the Poetry of the Marqués de Santillana and Other Fifteenth-century Poets
- Places of Entry and Exit
- 5 The Temple Gate, the Lions’ Den, and the Furnace: Liminal Spaces in Gonzalo de Berceo’s Marian Poetry
- 6 The Sacred Temple, the Tabernacle, and the Reliquary in the Poetry of Pedro de Santa Fé, Fernán Pérez de Guzmán, Juan Tallante, and Other Late Medieval Poets
- 7 Home is where the Heart is: Christ’s Dwelling Place from Gonzalo de Berceo’s Loores de Nuestra Señora to the Vita Christi of Isabel de Villena
- Spaces of Protection
- 8 Mary as a Strong Defence: The Protective Space of the Virgin from Alfonso X’s Cantigas de Santa Maria to Jaume Roig’s Siege Engine
- 9 ‘Más olías que ambargris’: Perfumed Spaces of the Virgin in Fray Ambrosio Montesino’s Poetry
- Afterword
- Appendix: Peninsular Hymns to the Virgin
- Bibliography
- Index of Places as Marian Figures
- Index of Objects and Containers
- Index of Plants, Medicinal Substances and Perfumes
- General Index
Summary
The supreme essence […] is in no place and time because it has no place and time. It is in every place and time because it is absent from none.
Interest in understanding the Virgin Mary among British and North American scholars is growing, as a recent spate of books on aspects of the Virgin Mary reveals. Yet, in many ways, there has always been a place for Marian studies, and interest in the Virgin has never dissipated among European scholars. Mary is the ‘nurturant’, ‘omnipotent’ other, the mother figure whose cult has never diminished and whose all-enveloping power lies in her ‘self-abnegation, suffering, intercession, and virginity’.
The principal aim of this book will be to re-examine typology about place for what it tells us about the Virgin Mary. To do so, I will seek to draw close to major trends in theological thinking, but also to give importance to place, as authors chose the places they believed best represented aspects of the Virgin's nature: garden, fountain, Temple, dwelling, or fortified stronghold. I will do this by re-evaluating how those metaphors are used in vernacular literatures, setting my findings alongside those from liturgy, to determine whether there was any influence from liturgy upon poets and, if so, how it might operate. In this I build on the work of James W. Marchand and his study of the hymns of Gonzalo de Berceo and their Latin origins, although without examining localized variants of the hymns that he studies.
There were strong literary traditions in both Castile-Leon and Aragon by the fifteenth century, and study of religious prose and poetry will not only provide further evidence of the way in which the newest Marian feast, the Conception, was becoming embedded in the kingdoms but will also evaluate what ordinary clerics or lay people understood about the various doctrines celebrated in the range of Marian feasts in the calendar: the Purification, the Annunciation, the Visitation, the Assumption, and the Nativity.
This book has a secondary, but equally important, purpose. It is the fruit of a desire to arrive at a deeper understanding of aspects of the beliefs about Mary that poets and authors absorbed, in the late medieval period, from the way religion was practised in public worship or through private devotion.
- Type
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- Information
- The Sacred Space of the Virgin Mary in Medieval Hispanic Literaturefrom Gonzalo de Berceo to Ambrosio Montesino, pp. 1 - 32Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2019