Soldiering for Christ: the role of the Miles Christi in four Old English Saints’ lives

<p>This dissertation studies the diverse approaches to ‘soldiering for Christ’ in Anglo-Saxon hagiographical narratives of warrior-saints. The investigation selects a group of four saints — Martin of Tours, Guthlac of Crowland, the Apostle Andrew, and Placidas–Eustace — as case studies of non-...

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Main Author: Cahilly-Bretzin, G
Other Authors: Orchard, A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Old English
Latin
Published: 2020
Subjects:
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author Cahilly-Bretzin, G
author2 Orchard, A
author_facet Orchard, A
Cahilly-Bretzin, G
author_sort Cahilly-Bretzin, G
collection OXFORD
description <p>This dissertation studies the diverse approaches to ‘soldiering for Christ’ in Anglo-Saxon hagiographical narratives of warrior-saints. The investigation selects a group of four saints — Martin of Tours, Guthlac of Crowland, the Apostle Andrew, and Placidas–Eustace — as case studies of non-royal warrior-saints who are celebrated in anonymous Old English prose and poetic Lives that engaged diverse audiences. Medieval hagiographers associated each of these saints with literal as well as spiritual warfare and appear to have used the saint’s association with warrior culture to define Christianity’s relationship to a martial ethos. The Old English narratives concerning these four saints are analysed by comparing the vernacular texts to their sources and intertextual parallels while also placing the compositions, transmissions, and audiences of the Old English accounts in their historical contexts. In doing so, the analyses find that there was a range of perspectives surrounding Christian warrior culture which were produced and copied in tandem, from peaceful and nonviolent portrayals in the ninth-century Martinmas-homily and various Anglo-Saxon narratives on Guthlac, to the apparent advocacy of Christian violence for converting or subduing pagans reflected in the ninth-century poem Andreas, the tenth-century prose Life of Andrew, and the late tenth- or early eleventh-century Life of Eustace. Texts presenting conflicting attitudes towards Christian warrior culture are transmitted in similar contexts and time periods, sometimes within the same manuscript, suggesting that no cohesive ideology concerning milites Christi developed throughout the Anglo-Saxon period. Moreover, the works on Martin, Guthlac, Andrew, and Eustace illustrate that Old English depictions of spiritual warfare were heavily indebted to models inherited from Scripture and early Christian texts, indicating that Christian militancy was not the result of a ‘Germanisation’ of the faith. Rather this dissertation argues that Anglo-Saxon hagiographers were individually responding to their historical context, source material, and intended audiences to define what it meant to soldier for Christ. </p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:49b32cbe-b59c-4ddb-bec7-cd4e9d8ea1292024-12-08T10:01:41ZSoldiering for Christ: the role of the Miles Christi in four Old English Saints’ livesThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:49b32cbe-b59c-4ddb-bec7-cd4e9d8ea129Miles ChristiHagiographyOld EnglishAnglo-SaxonMedieval StudiesAnglo-LatinTheologyEnglishOld EnglishLatinHyrax Deposit2020Cahilly-Bretzin, GOrchard, A<p>This dissertation studies the diverse approaches to ‘soldiering for Christ’ in Anglo-Saxon hagiographical narratives of warrior-saints. The investigation selects a group of four saints — Martin of Tours, Guthlac of Crowland, the Apostle Andrew, and Placidas–Eustace — as case studies of non-royal warrior-saints who are celebrated in anonymous Old English prose and poetic Lives that engaged diverse audiences. Medieval hagiographers associated each of these saints with literal as well as spiritual warfare and appear to have used the saint’s association with warrior culture to define Christianity’s relationship to a martial ethos. The Old English narratives concerning these four saints are analysed by comparing the vernacular texts to their sources and intertextual parallels while also placing the compositions, transmissions, and audiences of the Old English accounts in their historical contexts. In doing so, the analyses find that there was a range of perspectives surrounding Christian warrior culture which were produced and copied in tandem, from peaceful and nonviolent portrayals in the ninth-century Martinmas-homily and various Anglo-Saxon narratives on Guthlac, to the apparent advocacy of Christian violence for converting or subduing pagans reflected in the ninth-century poem Andreas, the tenth-century prose Life of Andrew, and the late tenth- or early eleventh-century Life of Eustace. Texts presenting conflicting attitudes towards Christian warrior culture are transmitted in similar contexts and time periods, sometimes within the same manuscript, suggesting that no cohesive ideology concerning milites Christi developed throughout the Anglo-Saxon period. Moreover, the works on Martin, Guthlac, Andrew, and Eustace illustrate that Old English depictions of spiritual warfare were heavily indebted to models inherited from Scripture and early Christian texts, indicating that Christian militancy was not the result of a ‘Germanisation’ of the faith. Rather this dissertation argues that Anglo-Saxon hagiographers were individually responding to their historical context, source material, and intended audiences to define what it meant to soldier for Christ. </p>
spellingShingle Miles Christi
Hagiography
Old English
Anglo-Saxon
Medieval Studies
Anglo-Latin
Theology
Cahilly-Bretzin, G
Soldiering for Christ: the role of the Miles Christi in four Old English Saints’ lives
title Soldiering for Christ: the role of the Miles Christi in four Old English Saints’ lives
title_full Soldiering for Christ: the role of the Miles Christi in four Old English Saints’ lives
title_fullStr Soldiering for Christ: the role of the Miles Christi in four Old English Saints’ lives
title_full_unstemmed Soldiering for Christ: the role of the Miles Christi in four Old English Saints’ lives
title_short Soldiering for Christ: the role of the Miles Christi in four Old English Saints’ lives
title_sort soldiering for christ the role of the miles christi in four old english saints lives
topic Miles Christi
Hagiography
Old English
Anglo-Saxon
Medieval Studies
Anglo-Latin
Theology
work_keys_str_mv AT cahillybretzing soldieringforchristtheroleofthemileschristiinfouroldenglishsaintslives