-
Jonas of Susa) (Sigusia, now Susa, Italy, c. 600 –
after 659 AD) was a
Columbanian monk and a
major Latin monastic author of hagiography. His Life of Saint...
- government. Fox,
Yaniv (2014-09-18).
Power and
Religion in
Merovingian Gaul:
Columbanian Monasticism and the
Formation of the
Frankish Aristocracy. Cambridge...
- and
Disibodenberg Abbey (founded c. 700) near
Odernheim am Glan.
These Columbanian monasteries were
great places of learning, with
substantial libraries;...
- date,
anyway after 1054. The
abbey was held by the
Benedictine order of
Columbanian monks of
Bobbio from 972 to 1431, when Pope
Boniface IX
turned it into...
- Nelson, p. 44 Fox,
Yaniv (2014):
Power and
Religion in
Merovingian Gaul:
Columbanian Monasticism and the
Formation of the
Frankish Aristocracy, Cambridge...
- the
example of Luxeuil's
mixed rule — a
combination of
Benedictine and
Columbanian monasticism —
throughout medieval Europe.
Balthild was
responsible for...
- Remiremont, Luxeuil, and
Granval shows his
connection to the
network of
Columbanian establishments. His
contacts with Modoald, Arnulf, and
Gundoin suggest...
- the
Irish missionary Columban, and Notre-Dame
therefore stood in the
Columbanian tradition of monasticism. In the 660s the
nunnery received a monastic...
-
Yaniv Fox (18
September 2014).
Power and
Religion in
Merovingian Gaul:
Columbanian Monasticism and the
Formation of the
Frankish Aristocracy. Cambridge...
-
excommunicated him. The
dispute over the
correct interpretation of the
Columbanian tradition occupied Agrestius and
Eustace into the 620s.
Although Jonas...