medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
From: Rosemary Hayes-Milligan & Andrew Milligan
> Nearly a century before Becket (1094/5),
i.e., after 1066.
>Herbert Losinga's new cathedral at Norwich was dedicated 'in the name and in
the honour of the Holy and Undivided Trinity.'
which is also the way that 11th-12th c. French (at least) Kings opened their
formal charters.
> Whereas in southern Italy
Norman territory.
>dedications to the Trinity become noticeable in the eleventh century, first
the abbey of La Cava (today's Cava de' Tirreni) near Salerno and later its
associated houses at the Norman capitals of Venosa and Mileto.
ditto.
>Further north, also from the eleventh century is Florence's originally
Vallombrosan church of Santa Trinità,
Exception, proving Rule.
i'm hallucinating a Norman pattern here.
as i wrote earlier, we have Fecamp and Falaise (at least) in Normandy, Tiron
right on the border between the diocese of Chartres and Normandy...
c
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