Dominus Jhesus novum genus milittie constituet elegit:“主耶稣已经设立并选择了一种新的骑士身份”。十二至十六世纪军会与女性的关系——综述

Q4 Arts and Humanities
H. Nicholson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

军事宗教教团的规范文本一般都试图限制甚至阻止公开承认的兄弟会成员与妇女之间的一切互动,而圣殿教团的原始规则表明,妇女不应再被接纳为教团成员。这种限制的原因是为了防止兄弟们分散了他们的精神使命,通过实际存在的妇女。但是,实际上,宪章、财产清单和叙述的证据表明,所有军事宗教会都接纳妇女以某种身份- -作为修女、捐赠者、配偶和腐蚀者- -并每天与妇女交往。军事修会的正式修女们遵循着修女般的生活方式,专注于祈祷而不是行动。然而,在原始资料中,非专业妇女出现在军事修会的赞助人、房客和雇员中,甚至偶尔拿起武器支持他们的军事活动。军事修会也赞助女圣徒,既有天上的圣徒(如圣母玛利亚),也有地上的圣妇(如蒙陶的多萝西娅)。本文旨在调查军事教团与妇女互动并使她们参与其工作的各种方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Dominus Jhesus novum genus militie constituit et elegit: “the Lord Jesus has set up and chosen a new sort of knighthood”. The military orders’ relations with women from the twelfth to the sixteenth century ‒ a survey
The normative texts of the Military Religious Orders generally sought to limit or even prevent all interaction between the professed Brothers and women, and the primitive rule of the Order of the Temple indicated that women should no longer be admitted to the Order. The reason for this restriction was to prevent the Brothers being distracted from their spiritual vocation through the physical presence of women. In practice, however, the evidence of charters, estate inventories, and narrative accounts reveal that all the Military Religious Orders admitted women in some capacity – as sorores, donatae, consorores and corrodians – and interacted with women on a daily basis. Fully professed sisters of the Military Orders followed a lifestyle like that of nuns, focused on prayer rather than action. However, lay women appear in the primary sources as patrons, tenants, and employees of the Military Orders and even occasionally took up arms to support their military activities. The Military Orders also patronised female saints, both saints in heaven (such as the Blessed Virgin Mary) and holy women on Earth (such as Dorothea of Montau). This article sets out to survey the various ways in which the Military Orders interacted with women and involved them in their work.
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来源期刊
Ordines Militares
Ordines Militares Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.30
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22
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