Over six hundred years ago a woman known as Julian of Norwich wrote what is now regarded as one of the greatest works of literature in English. Based on a sequence of mystical visions she received in 1373, her book is called Revelations of Divine Love.
Julian lived through an age of political and religious turmoil, as well as through the misery of the Black Death, and her writing engages with timeless questions about life, love and the meaning of suffering. But who was Julian of Norwich? And what can she teach us today?
Medievalist and TV historian Janina Ramirez invites you to join her in exploring Julian’s remarkable life and times, offering insights into how and why her writing has survived, and what we can learn from this fourteenth-century mystic whose work lay hidden in the shadows of her male contemporaries for far too long.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Preface ix
Chronology xiii
Part 1
THE HISTORY
1 Introducing Julian 3
2 Julian’s life and times 17
3 Themes in Revelations of Divine Love 37
Part 2
THE LEGACY
4 A brief history of Revelations of Divine Love 73
Notes 86
Further reading 89
Index 93
Sobre o autor
Janina Ramirez is the course director on the Undergraduate Certificate and Diploma in History of Art at Oxford University. She has written and presented numerous BBC history documentaries, and is the author of The Private Lives of the Saints: Power, passion and politics in Anglo-Saxon England (W. H. Allen, 2015).
Her most recent TV documentaries include ‘Chivalry and Betrayal: The Hundred Years’ War’ (2013), ‘Architects of the Divine: The First Gothic Age’ (2014), ‘Saints and Sinners: Britain’s Millennium of Monasteries’ (2015), ‘The Art of the Vikings: Secret Knowledge’ (March 2016) and ‘The Search for the Lost Manuscript: Julian of Norwich’ (July 2016).