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medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
Marco, you may also know the striking blood-of-Christ images in Jeffrey Hamburger's Nuns as Artists: The Visual Culture of a Medieval Convent. University of California Press, 1997. But this, too, is mainly from German sources. I can't remember if he deals with Italy. -- Paul

On 1 February 2018 at 04:25, Marco Piana, Mr <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture

Dear all,

 

Thanks again for the amazing feedback, and sorry for the late answer. Things are a bit hectic at uni today.

Dear Robert, thank you very much for sharing your findings. The “Anima Christi” perfectly matches Savonarola’s imagery, thus strengthening the idea that bathing in the blood of Christ was a common topos in Dominican devotion.

Dear David, thanks for pointing me towards the Charter of Christ. The idea of Christ’s blood as ink is very interesting, especially because Savonarola’s vision talks about bloody marks as well. I will look into it.

Dear Rosemary, please let me know more about the dating regarding “Anima Christi” if you can. I intend to mention all this in a note. And to me, “gushing” sounds way more fascinating than “flowing.”

 

If I have forgotten to thank someone, please let me know. I will gladly answer to you in private.

 

All the best,

 

Marco

 

From: medieval-religion - Scholarly discussions of medieval religious culture [mailto:MEDIEVAL-RELIGION@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of David Winter
Sent: Wednesday, January 31, 2018 1:06 PM


To: [log in to unmask]UK
Subject: Re: [M-R] Bathing into The Blood of Christ

 

medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture

Haven't had a chance to read the whole thread, but I wonder whether the Charter of Christ might be useful to you. It's an allegorical motif in which Christ's sacrifice is compared to a legal document or diploma. Various elements of the crucifixion (the arma Christi, etc) become components of the document. The blood of his sacrifice is the "ink" of the charter. Maybe someone more versed in the motif can recommend bibliography if it's at all useful. 
Best,

 

David R. Winter

Associate Professor and Chair,

Department of History,

Brandon University

 

phone: (001) 204-720-1435

fax: (001) 204-726-0473

 

 


From: medieval-religion - Scholarly discussions of medieval religious culture [[log in to unmask].UK] on behalf of Rosemary Hayes-Milligan and Andrew Milligan [[log in to unmask]]
Sent: 31 January 2018 11:34
To: [log in to unmask]UK
Subject: Re: [M-R] Bathing into The Blood of Christ

medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture 

Dear Rob

 

I wondered why it was nagging at the back of my brain and now realise that it was the imagery produced by the 'modern' (19th century) translation of Anima Christi that is still the hymn most likely to get a Catholic congregation singing properly.  In hymn books I have seen, it has been attributed to John XXII (pope 1316-34) - but I do not know how accurately?  For those who do not know it, the words most frequently sung (in the UK at least) are as follows:

 

Soul of my Savior sanctify my breast,
Body of Christ, be thou my saving guest,
Blood of my Savior, bathe me in thy tide,
wash me with waters gushing [think we tend to sing 'flowing'] from thy side
.

Strength and protection may thy passion be,
O blessed Jesus, hear and answer me;
deep in thy wounds, Lord, hide and shelter me,
so shall I never, never part from thee.

Guard and defend me from the foe malign,
in death's dread moments make me only thine;
call me and bid me come to thee on high
where I may praise thee with thy saints for ay. (Edward Caswell's translation)

 

Best,

Rosemary Hayes

----- Original Message -----

From: [log in to unmask]" target="_blank"> Rob Durk

To: [log in to unmask]" target="_blank"> [log in to unmask]UK

Sent: Tuesday, January 30, 2018 8:56 PM

Subject: Re: [M-R] Bathing into The Blood of Christ

 

medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture

Hi Marco

 

Apologies for being late into the fray!

 

My general ambit is musical and liturgical but, having edited the music of Gaspar van Weerbeke's (c.1445-1516+) "Anima Christi" (only a few weeks back), I did spot this thread only the lightbulb took a little time to come on.... not an account, but a devotional text, so slightly off your main topic but I suspect worth visiting for context.

 

Earliest surviving text is Lbl Harley 2253, c. 1340

 

There are a few textual variants around but no huge significance theologically.

 

"Sanguis Christi inebria me" gets a variety of renditions into English; "inebriate" is an obvious one, but the most widely used English translation runs "Blood of my Saviour, bathe me in thy tide", 'inebria' having also the meaning 'saturate, drench' (per Whitaker's Words).

 

That, with the following line, "Aqua lateris Christi, lava me," - "Wash me with water flowing from thy side" I think definitely pulls this text into your research basket.

 

The van Weerbeke setting was printed in 1503 in Venice but my gut feeling is that it dates back to his mid 1470s period in Milan. So a slightly variant text to Harley 2253 was available to him.

 

There's an interesting paper on the connection between the text and Dominican thought on academia.edu:

 

Cheers

 

Rob

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


From: "Marco Piana, Mr" <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]UK
Sent: Sunday, 28 January 2018, 18:03
Subject: [M-R] Bathing into The Blood of Christ

 

medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture

Dear all,

 

My name is Marco Piana, and I am a Ph.D. student at McGill University, Montreal. During the last months, I have been working on an article on blood devotion in early modern Italy. One of my case studies involves a vision/prophecy where people convert to Christianity by bathing into the blood of Christ. I was wondering if it is a consistent topos in medieval Christianity, and if so, if you ever encountered a similar case.

 

Thank you very much in advance!

 

All the best,

 

Marco

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