ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2000:  This is a full-scale integrated synthesis of the origins, spread and effects of monasticism in Scandinavia, and along the shores of the Baltic and the North Sea. Beginning with a review of the geography and communications by land and, especially, by sea, of the region, the author goes on to describe early monasticism among the Frisians ,Saxons and the Danes, then in Norway and Sweden, Saxony, Slesvig and Ribe, and finally Pomerania and the southern and eastern Baltic littoral. Throughout the book he stresses the place of abbeys and convents within their local surroundings, as centres of conversion, recruitment and redistribution of wealth. He traces the intellectual, literary and liturgical connections between monastic centres and neighbouring cathedral towns and royal strongholds, and the means by which orders or congregations maintained discipline from the centre. He also describes the leaders who emerged from convent, abbey or congregation to command local and regional political and cultural life, and the ways in which monastic centres influenced popular devotion.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter Two|9 pages

Early monasticism among Frisians and Saxons

chapter Three|9 pages

The archbishops' options

chapter Four|16 pages

Eleventh-century monasticism: Eastern Denmark

chapter Five|16 pages

Eleventh-century monasticism: Funen and Jutland

chapter Eight|22 pages

The great period: civil war 1

chapter Nine|32 pages

The great period: civil war 2

chapter Ten|19 pages

The great period: civil war 3

chapter Twelve|25 pages

The Valdemarian age 2: movements among monks

chapter Fourteen|16 pages

The Valdemarian age 4: peripheria and conclusion