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English Saints in the Medieval Liturgies of Scandinavian Churches Edited by John Toy
The slow steady process of Christianising the Scandinavian countries [medieval Denmark, Norway and Sweden, and also at that period, Finland] in the tenth to the thirteenth centuries was spear-headed in the earliest phases by missionaries from Anglo-Saxon England. There is a fair certainty that such missionaries took with them the books that would have been essential for church services - Bibles, Gospel-books, Psalters, but also Breviaries for the daily Office - along with saints' relics, thus introducing the cults of the saints venerated at the time in England. A remarkable quantity of mainly [though not exclusively] fragmentary manuscripts have survived from this activity and from new manuscripts that must have been produced in Scandinavia in imitation of the imports. Almost all of them were gathered together at the Reformation as redundant but valuable material and used mainly to provide covers and bindings for provincial accounts from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; they are preserved largely in the National Archives in Copenhagen, Helsinki, Oslo and Stockholm as well as to a lesser extent in various libraries in Scandinavia and the rest of Europe. |
DETAILS 2 b/w illustrationsSize: 21.6 x 13.8 13 digit ISBN: 9781870252461 Binding: Hardback First published: 21/May/2009 Publication date: 21/May/2009 Price: 95.00 USD / 50.00 GBP Imprint: Henry Bradshaw Society Series: Henry Bradshaw Society Subsidia Subject: Medieval Literature BIC class: HRAX STATUS: Not yet published Details updated on 05/01/2009 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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