Templars and Hospitallers in the Cities of the West and the Latin East (Twelfth to Thirteenth Centuries) (original) (raw)
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Reminder: CFP - Friars in Motion: Mendicant Orders and Urban Development (1200-1500), EAUH2020
SPECIALIST SESSION: S-URB-1 | Friars in Motion: Mendicant Orders and Urban Development (1200-1500) The purpose of the session is to study the urban, architectural, social and economic consequences that the arrival of the Mendicant Orders involved in the European cities of the Middle Ages. The development of the city, in fact, is profoundly influenced by the establishment of convents in the suburbs, where the new “borghi” develop. The “crown” of convents around the center of the city forms a “belt” of urban hub from which new neighborhoods develop, but also a place for the exchange of ideas and people. In fact, the friar moves from one city to another, importing ideas, styles of preaching, social issues. For this reason, the convent is an important place of passage. Moreover, the convent is an open space that functions as a place of study, but also as a place of welcome for the masses of the poor who come from their companions and for the pilgrims who use it as a stop on their journey. The session proposes to explore all these aspects of the role of convents in the Medieval and Early Modern city, considered as a place of interchange between cultures - even artistic- and people, in a multidisciplinary and international perspective. They are invited to present proposals of different historical disciplines (topics on built environment, on artistic and architectural history, on religious, economic, social subjects connect to urban history) aimed at investigating the theme proposed in the session. In particular, we believe it is useful to start a debate regarding some urban phenomena triggered by the convents of the mendicant orders and verify their actual consequences on the urban structure and architectural solutions adopted, starting from some specific cases. In this way, we aim to verify how a phenomenon on a European scale can interact with individual local cases, both in big cities and in small villages. Organizers: Silvia Beltramo, Politecnico di Torino, Catarina Almeida Marado, University of Coimbra, Gianmario Guidarelli, Università di Padova. More information: https://www.uantwerpen.be/en/conferences/eauh2020/sessions/sessionsoverview/session-type/specialist-sessions/# www. friarscity.eu
LAST DAYS!!! CfP. Friars in Motion: Mendicant Orders and Urban Development (1200-1500
European Association for Urban History, 15th International Conference on Urban History Cities in Motion, Antwerp 2-5 september 2020 CALL FOR PAPERS SPECIALIST SESSION: S-URB-1 | Friars in Motion: Mendicant Orders and Urban Development (1200-1500) The purpose of the session is to study the urban, architectural, social and economic consequences that the arrival of the Mendicant Orders involved in the European cities of the Middle Ages. The development of the city, in fact, is profoundly influenced by the establishment of convents in the suburbs, where the new “borghi” develop. The “crown” of convents around the center of the city forms a “belt” of urban hub from which new neighborhoods develop, but also a place for the exchange of ideas and people. In fact, the friar moves from one city to another, importing ideas, styles of preaching, social issues. For this reason, the convent is an important place of passage. Moreover, the convent is an open space that functions as a place of study, but also as a place of welcome for the masses of the poor who come from their companions and for the pilgrims who use it as a stop on their journey. The session proposes to explore all these aspects of the role of convents in the Medieval and Early Modern city, considered as a place of interchange between cultures - even artistic- and people, in a multidisciplinary and international perspective. They are invited to present proposals of different historical disciplines (topics on built environment, on artistic and architectural history, on religious, economic, social subjects connect to urban history) aimed at investigating the theme proposed in the session. In particular, we believe it is useful to start a debate regarding some urban phenomena triggered by the convents of the mendicant orders and verify their actual consequences on the urban structure and architectural solutions adopted, starting from some specific cases. In this way, we aim to verify how a phenomenon on a European scale can interact with individual local cases, both in big cities and in small villages. More information: https://www.uantwerpen.be/en/conferences/eauh2020/sessions/sessionsoverview/session-type/specialist-sessions/# www. friarscity.eu Email: friarscity@polito.it Organizers: Silvia Beltramo, Politecnico di Torino, Catarina Almeida Marado, University of Coimbra, Gianmario Guidarelli, Università di Padova.
Essays on Lay and Ecclesiastical Communities in and Around the Medieval Urban Parish
2024
This book gives a definite contribution to a wide-ranging reflection on the medieval parish and the secular clergy, considered within a long-term chronological framework and a wide geographical scope that allows the analysis and confrontation of case studies from the Iberian kingdoms, Northern France, Italian Piedmont, Lombardy, Flanders, Transylvania, and North of the Holy Roman Empire. The chapters published in this book tells of dynamics of social, religious, and cultural exclusion and inclusion within lay communities, of the constitution of family elites and parish confraternities; it shows the composition and the recruitment rationales of the parish clergy and of some ecclesiastical chapters with a duty of Cura animarum; it examines the relations of the churches and parochial clergy with more prominent – secular and regular – ecclesiastical institutions in the context of the establishment and exercise of the right of patronage; finally, it explores the role of the secular clergy in the application of justice, based on the characterization of their cultural and juridical formation.
European Association for Urban History, 15th International Conference on Urban History Cities in Motion, Antwerp 2-5 september 2020 More information: https://www.uantwerpen.be/en/conferences/eauh2020/sessions/sessions-overview/session-type/specialist-sessions/# www. friarscity.eu Contact: friarscity@polito.it The purpose of the session is to study the urban, architectural, social and economic consequences that the arrival of the Mendicant Orders involved in the European cities of the Middle Ages. They are invited to present proposals of different historical disciplines (topics on built environment, on artistic and architectural history, on religious, economic, social subjects connect to urban history) aimed at investigating the theme proposed in the session. In particular, we believe it is useful to start a debate regarding some urban phenomena triggered by the convents of the mendicant orders and verify their actual consequences on the urban structure and architectural solutions adopted, starting from some specific cases. In this way, we aim to verify how a phenomenon on a European scale can interact with individual local cases, both in big cities and in small villages.
Preaching, Building, and Burying. Friars in the Medieval City. Introductory Chapter
Preaching, Building, and Burying. Friars in the Medieval City. Introductory Chapter, 2014
The mendicant orders had a profound impact on urban space. Their focus on the externalization of religion through outdoor preaching meant that initially church spaces for the laity were not essential; as a result, the churches of the friars were erected in episodic phases.