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Laura Swan has for many years studied and written about the history of women's spirituality and the monastic life. She is the associate editor of Magistra: A Journal of Women's Spirituality in History and adjunct professor of religious studies at Saint Martin's University in Washington State. A mehr anzeigen member and former prioress of St. Placid Priory, a community of Benedictine women in the Pacific Northwest, her books include The Forgotten Desert Mothers and Engaging Benedict. weniger anzeigen
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1954
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female

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Reading this book sure explains why I’d never heard of the Beguines. Let’s see, a group of spiritual women seeking the vita apostolica who would not have been accepted by sanctioned orders or did not have the means to join one formed their own communities and then went on to defy the church’s authority over individual salvation, were critical of church hierarchy and the laxity of the clergy, were world class merchants that took on the trade guilds, who dedicated their life and their earnings to caring for the poor and the sick, who performed hospice care and promoted literacy and independence for other women…I’m guessing that’s probably how they got left out of all the big textbooks.… (mehr)
 
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Deni_Weeks | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 16, 2023 |
An introduction to the sayings, lives, stories, and spirituality of women in the postbiblical, early Christian movement.
 
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PAFM | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 8, 2020 |
The author, Sr. Laura Swan O.S.B. is a member of St. Placid Priory and a former Abbess there. http://www.stplacid.org/

The Middle Ages were a time of more freedom for some women than previously thought and Swan lays it all out for us in this book. I suspect the general outline and most of the contents may be a result of her teaching curricula as a lecturer in religious studies at St. Martin University in Lacey, WA https://www.stmartin.edu/directory/sister-laura-swan as well as her personal interest. In any event it was an eye-opening and uplifting book for me which was in many places very familiar.

The beguines were mystics and women lay religious of some personal means (their male contemporaries were called beghards) who got their start with patronage from Low Country nobility in the early 13th century.

Swan gives us a very in-depth look at who they were and what their lives were like and points to property, civil, and business documentation of the times to prove both the facts of their existence and her thesis of their financial, spiritual, and personal independence from men and the Church. While she does footnote, it’s restrained and I would have liked to have had references to primary source documents of these records, even if they are in Old German or Old French or Old Dutch. Swan does however provide a very nice bibliography of works in English translation.

As Swan takes us into the world and times of these women, she shows us that they were widespread and long successful – the last beguine died in 2013. In Belgium alone there were 111 Medieval beguinages and of those 13 are UNESCO World Heritage Sites today.

From psalter and manuscript artists and designers, to cloth merchants, to human trafficking-fighters, to bankers (perhaps even for the Knights Templar? The author does not say) , these exceptional women were also published authors, street preachers and renowned mystics, healers, diplomats, and counselors to the powerful and the powerless in equal measure. They did not withdraw from the world but chose to remain actively in it and regarded the Triune God in all His forms as Beloved. They took no vows, many remained married, lived in their own homes and traveled their cities freely.

Swan tries gives us as complete a picture of the beguines and their world as can be given to a general audience: who they were and gives us biographies of the well-known and not-so-well-known-but-interesting among them; how and where they were distributed around Europe; what the beguinages were and how they functioned & supported themselves; what beguine ministries and spirituality was like and how it was performed and lived out; how beguines offered compassion to their world; how they preached and became performers of their own passion plays; their writings; and she examines what their heresy trials were really about . (Hint: land grabs)

At one point early on I stopped and really considered if this was another one of those “Mary Magdalene wife of Jesus” books, just more subtly done. I still can’t say for sure, and you’re going to have to decide that for yourself. But if there ever were any daughters of Mary Magdalene and Jesus, I think these might have been they, authentically.

If you’re a woman of religious or spiritual bent, or anyone interested in the history of the Medieval period in Europe, I think you ought to do yourself the favour of reading this well written and well-presented non-fiction Medieval Womens’ History book about the beguines.
… (mehr)
 
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ktho64152 | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 6, 2016 |
Sayings, lives, and stories of early Christian women.
 
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PendleHillLibrary | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 10, 2016 |

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