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Bibliography

Dempsey, G. T., “Aldhelm of Malmesbury’s social theology: the barbaric heroic ideal christianised”, Peritia 15 (2001): 58–80.

  • journal article
Citation details
Contributors
Article
“Aldhelm of Malmesbury’s social theology: the barbaric heroic ideal christianised”
Periodical
Peritia: Journal of the Medieval Academy of Ireland 15 (2001)
Peritia 15 (2001), Brepols.
Volume
15
Pages
58–80
Description
Abstract (cited)
Aldhelm’s De virginitate was the major product of his scholarly energies. In it Aldhelm, in a fixation on virginity as the means of living on earth the angelic life, moved beyond simple sexual rigorism to a radical exaltation of the preservation of physical virginity through the advocacy of both castration and suicide. It is further argued that the prime motivating factor in Aldhelm’s doing so was his desire to establish, for his Anglo-Saxon audience, a new paradigm of a christianised heroic ideal for both male and female, a way of living a truly christian life in terms commensurate with the violent norms of the barbaric heroic code.
Subjects and topics
Sources
Texts
History, society and culture
Agents
AldhelmAldhelm
(d. 709)
Ealdhelm of Sherborne
abbot of Malmesbury and later, bishop of Sherborne; known as an author of a number of elaborate Latin tracts in prose and in verse
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Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
April 2013, last updated: August 2020