Document Type:
Collective work
Author/editor:
edited by Wim François, August den Hollander ; with the collaboration of Els Agten
 
Standard: François, Wim [Wim François] Hollander, August den [August den Hollander]
Title:
Vernacular Bible and religious reform in the Middle Ages and Early Modern era

Standard:

Series:
Bibliotheca ephemeridum theologicarum Lovaniensium
Volume:
287
Volume:
2017
Date of Publication:
2017
Place of Publication:
Leuven ; Paris ; Bristol

Standard: Louvain [Leuven][Löwen]

Publisher/Printer name:
Peeters

Standard: Peeters

ISBN/ISSN:
9789042934313
Pages:
VIII, 305 p.
Number of illustrations:
ill.
Format :
25 cm
Subjects:
Bible - German Translations - 1500-1800
Catholicism - Diffusion of the Bible - 1500-1800
Heretics - Attitude towards the Bible - Middle Ages
Reformation - Diffusion of the Bible - 1500-1600
Waldenses - Lecture of the Bible

Summary/Notes:

 The central focus of this book concerns vernacular Bibles in various regions of (late) medieval and early modern Europe, as well as the religious and cultural circumstances in which these books found their origin. The contributions represent a cross-section of several research traditions that show an interest in vernacular Bibles. The volume includes articles that demonstrate how vernacular Bibles were liable to censorship measures, viz. Francesca Tasca's contribution on Peter Valdes of Lyons, and Gigliola Fragnito's on post-Tridentine Catholic Europe. Other essays, in contrast, inspired by a social-historical approach, emphasize that laypeople in the late Middle Ages and Early Modern Era found ways to read the Bible and other religious works 'anyway' and that they were hardly hindered by bans instituted by ecclesiastical or secular governments. Two authors who take this position are Andrew C. Gow and Margriet Hoogvliet, who also question the paradigm that the Protestant Reformation was the first to open the Bible to the laity. Suzan A. Folkerts brings this intuition into practice by studying printers' choices as well as provenance data in books containing the Epistle and Gospel readings from Mass published between 1450 and 1550 in the Netherlands. The volume also contains contributions that focus on that book beyond Western European (Romania: Emanual Conac, Eugen and Lucia-Gabriela Munteanu and Scandinavia: Jonatan Pettersson). In this regard, attention is paid to the (pre)confessional character and literary choices that are constitutive for the text. The confessional Era and its implications in the political field are central to Elizabeth Hodgson's study of 'David's Psalms' in Reformation England and France/Switzerland. The 'post-confessional' eighteenth century Enlightenment Bible - rooted in the Catholic tradition - by Isaac-Joseph Berruyer is the object of an essay by Daniel J. Watkins. Finally, Kees Schepers devotes a study to 33 drawings made by the Brussels canon regular Gielis vander Hecken.

Contribution in a collective work :
- Le projet biblique antagoniste de Valdès de Lyon selon les mots de frère Étienne de Bourbon