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The Monastic Constitutions of Lanfranc, archbishop of Canterbury between 1070 and 1089, has long been recognized as one of the most important historical sources for medieval monastic life. In this major new revision of Dom David Knowles's classic editions of 1951 and 1967, C. N. L. Brooke incorporates the historical scholarship of the last generation to offer further insight into and illumination of Lanfranc and the monastic world of the eleventh century.
This collection of essays and articles by Dom David Knowles was
presented to him by his colleagues, friends and pupils on his
retirement from the Regius Chair of Modern History at Cambridge in
the summer of 1963. The collection opens with Dom David's Inaugural
Lecture as Regius Professor, 'The Historian and Character', which
provides the unifying theme of the book: almost all the studies
illustrate the author's interest in human problems and
personalities as well as his concern with medieval monasticism and
thought and with monastic historians of the modern world. In
illustrating his scholarship and his main field of interest, this
collection shows Dom David's unique capacity for revealing human
personality and his skill in writing history that appeals to the
general reader as well as to the historian.
The Monastic Order in England by Dom David Knowles was originally
published in 1940 and was quickly recognised as a scholarly classic
and masterpiece of historical literature. It covers the period from
about 940, when St Dunstan inaugurated the monastic reform by
becoming abbot of Glastonbury, to the early thirteenth century. Its
core is a marvellous narrative and detailed analysis of monasticism
in twelfth-century England, brilliantly set in the continental
background of all the monastic movements of the day - with a vivid
evocation of Anselm, Ailred, Henry of Blois and a host of other
central figures. Dom David himself brought this second edition up
to date in 1963.
This volume opens with a survey of monastic life and activities in
the early Tudor period, which throws new light on the fortunes of
the Cistercian abbeys and on the influence upon the monks of the
new humanist education. Chapters are devoted to Bishop Redman's
visitations of the white canons, to the rural pursuits of Prior
More of Worcester, to the friars ranged for and against the New
Learning, and to the Carthusians; there are also a number of
character sketches of notable abbots and others. There follows a
review of the changing religious climate: of Wolsey's attempts at
reform, of the all-perspective influence of Erasmus and of the
career of Elizabeth Barton. The economic state of the monasteries
is discussed as a prelude to the sombre story of the Suppression,
illuminated by rare gleams of heroism. The fate and after-careers
of the religious are treated in full from the record sources; there
are chapters on the aftermath in Mary's reign and the linking with
modern Benedictines, and an epilogue looks back over six centuries
of English monasticism.
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