List of Illustrations
Preface
John Van Engen
1. Introduction: Religion and Religious Worlds in Between
Jennifer Kolpacoff Deane, University of Minnesota Morris, and Anne E. Lester, Johns Hopkins University
2. Herbert Grundmann: Confession and the “Religious Movements”
Letha Böhringer, Universität zu Köln
3. Francis of Assisi, the Vita Apostolica, and the Roman Church: Rethinking the Paradigms
Amanda Power, University of Oxford
4. Hypocrites! Critiques of Religious Movements and Criticism of the Church, 1050–1300
Sita Steckel, University of Münster
5. Crusading as a Religious Movement: Families, Community, and Lordship in a Vernacular Frame
Anne E. Lester, Johns Hopkins University
6. Coming Together as an Apostolic Act: Confraternalism as an Umbrella for Medieval Religious Movements
Neslihan Şenocak, Columbia University
7. Reassessing the Links between “The Women’s Religious Movement” and “The Origins of a Religious Literature in the Vernacular” in France
Sean L. Field, University of Vermont
8. “More Useful in the Salvation of Others”: Beguines, Religio, and the Cura Mulierum at the Early Sorbonne
Tanya Stabler Miller, Loyola University, Chicago
9. Between Charity and Controversy: The Grey Sisters, Liminality, and the Religious Life
Alison More, College of New Rochelle
10. Women, Power, and Religious Dissent: Why Women Never became Heresiarchs
Janine Larmon Peterson, Maurist University
11. Navigating Saintly Circles: Margherita Colonna and the Women’s Religious Movement in Rome
Lezlie Knox, Marquette University
12. The “Clever Girls” of Prague: Beguines, Preachers, and Late Medieval Bohemian Religion
Jana Grollová
Bibliography
Index