Tropen und Sequenzen im Liber Ordinarius der Kathedrale von Regensburg, in: Harald, Buchinger - Sabine, Reichert (ed.), Gottesdienst in Regensburger Institutionen. Zur Vielfalt liturgischer Traditionen in der Vormoderne, Regensburg, Schnell Steiner, 2021 (Forum Mittelalter, Studien, 18), 41-54 (original) (raw)
Related papers
2020
David Hiley, Gionata Brusa (ed.), Der Liber ordinarius der Regensburger Domkirche. Eine textkritische Edition des mittelalterlichen Regelbuchs, Purkersdorf (Verlag Brüder Hollinek) 2020, LXI–332 S. (Codices Manuscripti & Impressi. Zeitschrift für Buchgeschichte. Supplementum, 16), ISSN 0379-3621, EUR 189,00.
Der Blick auf die Entwicklung der Liturgie hat sich in jüngerer Zeit markant verändert. So mussten beispielsweise die Vorstellungen einer „goldenen“ Frühzeit, eines „dunklen“ Mittelalters oder einer „Einheitsliturgie“ differenzierteren Modellen weichen. Die Liturgiewissenschaft beschäftigen heute veränderte Interpretationen von Zeugnissen der Liturgiegeschichte, neue Quellen und Methoden sowie Forschungsansätze, die die wirkliche gottesdienstliche Praxis in den Blick nehmen. Fachleute diskutieren in diesem Buch für verschiedene Epochen der Liturgiegeschichte den aktuellen Wissensstand und entwickeln weiterführende Fragestellungen. Dabei zeigen sie, welche Bedeutung der Geschichte des Gottesdienstes für Theologie und Kirche, Geistes- und Kulturwissenschaften zukommt. The view of the development of the liturgy has changed significantly in recent times. For example, the ideas of a "golden" early period, a "dark" middle age or a "unity liturgy" had to give way to more differentiated models. The liturgical sciences today employ altered interpretations of liturgical testimonies, new sources and methods, and research approaches that focus on actual liturgical practice. Experts discuss the current state of knowledge in this book for different epochs of the liturgical history and develop further questions. They show the importance of the history of worship for theology and church, humanities and cultural studies.
The article explores the reception of the Council of Trent in the theological censuring which took place within the Roman Congregations of the Inquisition and the Index (ca. 1570-1600). Special attention is given to the problem of the relationship between episcopal authority (council) and centralised authority (Pope, Inquisition, Mendicant orders). The article uses materially my reconstruction of the cases of Contarini, Cajetan and Gropper (2008), but offers also some further clarifications, e.g. on the first Roman censure of Contarini's opera ("Zensur 1" in Arnold 2008), which appears to me now more clearly as a product of the Roman Inquisition and not of the Index.
Archiv für Liturgiewissenschaft, 2018
Beginning with a census of printed liturgical rites of the Middle Ages, this article discusses first the various reasons and circumstances which led to the change of media from manuscript to typescript in the case of the Libri ordinarii, and secondly the consequences of this change for the texts that had been handed down and for their recipients. The article brings together areas of study that have previously been treated separately: the study of incunabula, and the historical studies of liturgy, music, art and literature. The example of the ordinals from the ecclesiastical province of Magdeburg – which have not yet been edited – is used to demonstrate the methodological challenges faced in the comprehensive examination of the material and the deeper insights that can be expected.