The origins of royal anointing

The anointing of kings emerged as a Christian rite of passage in the early Middle Ages, although the exact circumstances and sequence of events that led to the general emergence of the rite remain controversial. This article argues that royal anointing first became a recognized and repeated practice...

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Main Author: O'Brien, C
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2023
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author O'Brien, C
author_facet O'Brien, C
author_sort O'Brien, C
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description The anointing of kings emerged as a Christian rite of passage in the early Middle Ages, although the exact circumstances and sequence of events that led to the general emergence of the rite remain controversial. This article argues that royal anointing first became a recognized and repeated practice within two separate societies: seventh-century Visigothic Spain and the eighth-century Frankish kingdom. Whereas previous work has stressed the role of Christian clerics in the emergence of this rite, the article argues that royal anointing had its origins within lay elite political culture and spoke primarily to the needs, not of the clerics who performed it, but of the laypeople who received and beheld it.
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spelling oxford-uuid:37e8f5cb-7ef1-44ff-8db0-4ccbbafc61ef2023-08-24T10:20:52ZThe origins of royal anointingJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:37e8f5cb-7ef1-44ff-8db0-4ccbbafc61efEnglishSymplectic ElementsCambridge University Press2023O'Brien, CThe anointing of kings emerged as a Christian rite of passage in the early Middle Ages, although the exact circumstances and sequence of events that led to the general emergence of the rite remain controversial. This article argues that royal anointing first became a recognized and repeated practice within two separate societies: seventh-century Visigothic Spain and the eighth-century Frankish kingdom. Whereas previous work has stressed the role of Christian clerics in the emergence of this rite, the article argues that royal anointing had its origins within lay elite political culture and spoke primarily to the needs, not of the clerics who performed it, but of the laypeople who received and beheld it.
spellingShingle O'Brien, C
The origins of royal anointing
title The origins of royal anointing
title_full The origins of royal anointing
title_fullStr The origins of royal anointing
title_full_unstemmed The origins of royal anointing
title_short The origins of royal anointing
title_sort origins of royal anointing
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