Elizabeth of Spalbeek, Christina Mirabilis, and Marie d'Oignies were three of the famous late twelfth-/early thirteenth-century 'holy women' from the region of Brabant and Liege: their life stories (written in Latin by Philip of Clairvaux, Thomas of Cantimpre, and Jacques of Vitry) were read throughout later medieval Europe, and Margery Kempe modelled her 'Book', and her life, upon Marie's. The Latin lives of these beguine saints were not well known in England, but they were translated into English in the fifteenth century, and survive together in a single manuscript: Oxford, Bodleian Library, Douce 114. Three Women of Liege is the first critical edition of these Lives, which represent some of the only evidence of English interest in continental female mysticism. This edition includes an introduction that discusses the role of the manuscript in England and three essays that analyze the roles of these beguines in their Low Countries home of Liège along with the English reception of their lives. The edition itself is also extensively annotated and glossed, making it accessible to any scholar of English medieval literature.
Author(s): Jennifer N. Brown
Series: Medieval Women: Texts and Contexts, 23
Publisher: Brepols
Year: 2008
Language: English
Pages: 358
City: Turnhout
Acknowledgements vi
Introduction 1
The Middle English Life of Elizabeth of Spalbeek by Philip of Clairvaux 27
The Middle English Life of Christina Mirabilis by Thomas of Cantimpré 51
The Middle English Life of Marie d’Oignies by Jacques of Vitry, Book I 85
The Middle English Life of Marie d’Oignies by Jacques of Vitry, Book II 121
Elizabeth of Spalbeek: 'Performatio Christi' 191
Christina Mirabilis: Astonishing Piety 219
Marie d’Oignies: The 'Vita' of Jacques of Vitry 247
Glossary 289
Select Bibliography 335
Index 341