The Divine Office in the Latin Middle Ages : methodology and source studies, regional developments, hagiography : written in honor of Professor Ruth Steiner
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Bibliographic Information
The Divine Office in the Latin Middle Ages : methodology and source studies, regional developments, hagiography : written in honor of Professor Ruth Steiner
Oxford University Press, 2000
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Note
"Bibliography of writings by Ruth Steiner": p. 561-565
Includes bibliographical references (p. 567-607) and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Divine Office-or, the cycle of daily worship services other than the Mass-constitutes the most important body of liturgical texts and music for medieval studies. It is a collection of spiritual works that is central to the culture of the Middle Ages. This volume addresses the Office from a variety of points of view, allowing the reader to grasp the current state of research and to make connections.
Table of Contents
Lila Collamore: Prelude: Charting the Divine Office
Part I. A Methodological Introduction
1: Margot E. Fassler: Sermons, Sacramentaries, and Early Sources for the Office in the Latin West: The Example of Advent
2: Laszlo Dobszay: Reading an Office Book
Part II. The Pre-Carolingian Office
3: James W. McKinnon: The Origins of the Western Office
4: Joseph Dyer: Observations on the Divine Office in the Rule of the Master
5: Peter Jeffery: Eastern and Western Elements in the Irish Monastic Prayer of the Hours
Part III. Manuscript Studies
6: Ritva Jacobsson: The Antiphoner of Compiegne, Paris, BNF lat. 17436
7: James Grier: The Divine Office at St. Martial in the Early Eleventh Century: Paris, BN lat. 1085
8: Michael Huglo: The Cluniac Processional of Solesmes, Bibliotheque de l'Abbaye
9: Susan Rankin: Taking the Rough with the Smooth: Melodic Versions and Manuscript Status
Part IV. Regional Developments: Carolingian Period to the Later Middle Ages
10: Hartmut Moeller: Office Compositions from St. Gall: Saints Gallus and Othmar
11: Terence Bailey: The Development and Chronology of the Ambrosian Sanctorale: The Evidence of the Antiphon Texts
12: Gunilla Bjoerkvall and Andreas Haug: Performing Latin Verse: Text and Music in Early Medieval Versified Offices
13: Anne Walters Robertson: From Office to Mass: The Antiphons of Vespers and Lauds and the Antiphons before the Gospel in Northern France
14: Wulf Arlt: The Office for the Feast of the Circumcision from Le Puy
15: Craig Wright: The Palm Sunday Processional in Medieval Chartres
16: Barbara Haggh: Nonconformity in the Use of Cambrai Cathedral: Guillaume Du Fay's Foundations
Part V. Hagiography
17: Gunilla Iversen: Transforming a Viking into a Saint: The Divine Office of St. Olav
18: Janka Szendrei: On the Prose Historia of St. Augustine
19: David Hiley: The Historia of St. Julian of Le Mans by Letald of Micy: Some Comments and Questions about a North French Office of the Early Eleventh Century
20: Rebecca A. Baltzer: The Little Office of the Virgin and Mary's Role at Paris
21: James John Boyce: The Carmelite Feast of the Presentation of the Virgin: A Study in Musical Adaptation
Part VI. The Office and Computers
22: Andrew Hughes: Large Projects and Small Resources: Late Medieval Liturgical Offices
23: Lora Matthews & Paul Merkley: CANTUS and Tonaries
Lila Collamore: Bibliography of Writings by Ruth Steiner
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