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medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture

Herewith a link to an earlier 'Saints of the day' for 19. April (including Sts. Mappalicius and companions; St. George of Antioch in Pisidia; St. Gerold of Großwalsertal; St. Alphege; St. Leo IX, pope; Bl. Bernard of Sithiu; Bl. Werner of Oberwesel):
http://tinyurl.com/cn8ylbe


Further to George of Antioch in Pisidia:

In the first sentence of that earlier post's notice of this saint, for 'G,' please read 'G.'.

In the same notice, the link to the numismatic image of Leo V no longer functions.  Please substitute the images on the first piece shown here:
http://www.byzantinecoins.com/July1998.html


Further to Alphege:

Expandable views of two illuminations depicting Alphege in an early fifteenth-century copy of Vincent of Beauvais' _Speculum historiale_ in its French-language version by Jean de Vignay (Den Haag, KB, ms.  72 A 24) are here (nos. 3 and 4):
http://www.kb.nl/manuscripts/show/images_text/72+A+24
 
In that earlier post's notice of this saint, the link to the virtual tour of St Alphege Church in Solihull no longer takes one directly to the page in question.  Use this instead:
http://www.solihullparish.org.uk/churches/st-alphege/tour

A view of what's left of the twelfth-century Church of St Alphege in Seasalter (Kent):
http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/438765

A brief account of, and some views of, St Alphege's Church in Canterbury (now mostly late medieval):
http://www.britainexpress.com/attractions.htm?attraction=3372
http://kent.lovesguide.com/canterbury_st_alphege.htm
http://www.machadoink.com/St%20Alphege%20Church.htm


Further to Leo X:

In that earlier post's notice of this saint, the link to a view of one of his privileges no longer functions.  Use this instead:
http://tinyurl.com/75h9vj2

In the same notice, use this link for a view of Leo (at left) as depicted at Bern, Burgerbibliothek, Cod. 292, fol. 92r (and the notice's further link to a detail view of Leo in that eleventh-century miniature no longer functions):
http://www.habsburg.net/typo3temp/pics/5fe6f91c55.jpg

In the same notice, the next depiction of Leo <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Leon_IX.jpg> is indeed from an illumination in the later twelfth-century cartulary chronicle of the abbey of San Clemente a Casauria (Paris, BnF, ms. Latin 5411).  According to the latter's description here <http://spazioweb.inwind.it/sanclemente/chr.htm>, the image is on fol. 218v.  Herewith a monochromatic view showing the mise-en-page:
http://spazioweb.inwind.it/sanclemente/images/chp.jpg 


Further to Werner of Oberwesel:

In that earlier post's notice of Werner, the link to the recent, German-language account of his cult, written for a seminar at the Universität Hamburg, is now timing out.  Use this link instead (and wait patiently: the document is very slow to load today):
http://www1.uni-hamburg.de/spaetmittelalter/Juden/PauerRautenbergWernher.pdf

Best,
John Dillon
 

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