Description

Book Synopsis
This is the first comprehensive interdisciplinary study of the cult of St Margaret of Antioch in medieval England. Margaret was one of the most famous female saints of both the Catholic world and of Eastern Christianity (where she was known as St Marina). Her legend is remembered for her confrontation with a dragon-shaped devil, who allegedly swallowed Margaret and then burst asunder. This episode became firmly established in iconography, making her one of the most frequently represented saints. Margaret was supposedly martyred in the late 3rd century, but apart from the historically problematic legend there is no evidence concerning her in other contemporary sources. The sudden appearance of her name in liturgical manuscripts in the late 8th century is connected with the dispersal of her relics at that time. The cult grew in England from Anglo-Saxon times, with over 200 churches dedicated to Margaret (second only to Mary among female saints), and hundreds of images and copies of her l

Trade Review
A Maid with a Dragon deserves great praise. Its carefully researched survey presents a fascinating wealth of material * Helen Phillips, Cardiff University, Folklore *

A Maid with a Dragon

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    A Hardback by Juliana Dresvina


      View other formats and editions of A Maid with a Dragon by Juliana Dresvina

      Publisher: Oxford University Press
      Publication Date: 6/23/2016 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780197265963, 978-0197265963
      ISBN10: 0197265960
      Also in:
      Mysticism

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This is the first comprehensive interdisciplinary study of the cult of St Margaret of Antioch in medieval England. Margaret was one of the most famous female saints of both the Catholic world and of Eastern Christianity (where she was known as St Marina). Her legend is remembered for her confrontation with a dragon-shaped devil, who allegedly swallowed Margaret and then burst asunder. This episode became firmly established in iconography, making her one of the most frequently represented saints. Margaret was supposedly martyred in the late 3rd century, but apart from the historically problematic legend there is no evidence concerning her in other contemporary sources. The sudden appearance of her name in liturgical manuscripts in the late 8th century is connected with the dispersal of her relics at that time. The cult grew in England from Anglo-Saxon times, with over 200 churches dedicated to Margaret (second only to Mary among female saints), and hundreds of images and copies of her l

      Trade Review
      A Maid with a Dragon deserves great praise. Its carefully researched survey presents a fascinating wealth of material * Helen Phillips, Cardiff University, Folklore *

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