12 research outputs found
A Century Recalled: Essays in Honor of Bryn Mawr College
Table of Contents
A Century Recalled: Introduction, Patricia Hochschild Labalme
In Appreciation, Eudora Welty
A Renewal of Mind: The Centennial Convocation
Heavenly and Earthly Wisdom: The Quaker Heritage of Bryn Mawr, Millicent Carey McIntosh
Rise to these Responsibilities: Faculty Powers and How They Grew, Mabel L. Lang
Desirable Elements: Refugee Professors at Bryn Mawr in the Thirties and Forties, Felix Gilbert
To Leap, Katharine Houghton Hepburn
Pledged to an Idea: An Experiment in Self-Governance, Anne Hobson Freeman
Rite and Ritual: Traditions at Bryn Mawr, Francine du Plessix Gray
Given Two Bridge-Builders, a Man, and a Woman: Feminism at Bryn Mawr, Patricia Hochschild Labalme
More Steeply to the Heights: The Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research, Dolores Griffin Norton
The Key to the Fields: The Classics at Bryn Mawr, Emily Townsend Vermeule
Remarkable Participation: Some Beginnings in Science at Bryn Mawr, Jane M. Oppenheimer
Reflections on Social Science as a Liberal—and Liberating—Art, Rosabeth Moss Kanter
Far Beyond Bryn Mawr: The Inernational Network, Elizabeth Gray Vining
Just Beyond Bryn Mawr: The Haverford Connection, Jonathan E. Rhoads
Shadows of Dreams, Richmond Lattimorehttps://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_books/1027/thumbnail.jp
A Century Recalled: Essays in Honor of Bryn Mawr College
Table of Contents
A Century Recalled: Introduction, Patricia Hochschild Labalme
In Appreciation, Eudora Welty
A Renewal of Mind: The Centennial Convocation
Heavenly and Earthly Wisdom: The Quaker Heritage of Bryn Mawr, Millicent Carey McIntosh
Rise to these Responsibilities: Faculty Powers and How They Grew, Mabel L. Lang
Desirable Elements: Refugee Professors at Bryn Mawr in the Thirties and Forties, Felix Gilbert
To Leap, Katharine Houghton Hepburn
Pledged to an Idea: An Experiment in Self-Governance, Anne Hobson Freeman
Rite and Ritual: Traditions at Bryn Mawr, Francine du Plessix Gray
Given Two Bridge-Builders, a Man, and a Woman: Feminism at Bryn Mawr, Patricia Hochschild Labalme
More Steeply to the Heights: The Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research, Dolores Griffin Norton
The Key to the Fields: The Classics at Bryn Mawr, Emily Townsend Vermeule
Remarkable Participation: Some Beginnings in Science at Bryn Mawr, Jane M. Oppenheimer
Reflections on Social Science as a Liberal—and Liberating—Art, Rosabeth Moss Kanter
Far Beyond Bryn Mawr: The Inernational Network, Elizabeth Gray Vining
Just Beyond Bryn Mawr: The Haverford Connection, Jonathan E. Rhoads
Shadows of Dreams, Richmond Lattimorehttps://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_books/1027/thumbnail.jp
Religious Devotion and Civic Division in Renaissance Venice : the Case of Lorenzo Giustiniani
When Lorenzo Giustiniani, bishop and first patriarch of Venice, died in 1456, his ancient and powerful family, his religious order, his patriarchal successors, and the Venetian government combined in a campaign to secure Lorenzo's promotion "to the altars" so that he might lend his spiritual protection to his native city.
Three processi for canonization were mandated : the first was never concluded, the next two never initiated. Finally, in 1524, a papal induit declared Lorenzo a beatus (not yet a sanctus), but the doge and his councillors failed to attend the celebration. My essay suggests that tensions between the "old" and "new" Venetian families may have frustrated this compaign to canonize a native saint and compromised even its partial victory.Labalme Patricia H. Religious Devotion and Civic Division in Renaissance Venice : the Case of Lorenzo Giustiniani. In: La religion civique à l’époque médiévale et moderne (chrétienté et islam) Actes du colloque organisé par le Centre de recherche «Histoire sociale et culturelle de l'Occident. XIIe-XVIIIe siècle» de l'Université de Paris X-Nanterre et l'Institut universitaire de France (Nanterre, 21-23 juin 1993) Rome : École Française de Rome, 1995. pp. 297-308. (Publications de l'École française de Rome, 213
Religious Devotion and Civic Division in Renaissance Venice : the Case of Lorenzo Giustiniani
When Lorenzo Giustiniani, bishop and first patriarch of Venice, died in 1456, his ancient and powerful family, his religious order, his patriarchal successors, and the Venetian government combined in a campaign to secure Lorenzo's promotion "to the altars" so that he might lend his spiritual protection to his native city.
Three processi for canonization were mandated : the first was never concluded, the next two never initiated. Finally, in 1524, a papal induit declared Lorenzo a beatus (not yet a sanctus), but the doge and his councillors failed to attend the celebration. My essay suggests that tensions between the "old" and "new" Venetian families may have frustrated this compaign to canonize a native saint and compromised even its partial victory.Labalme Patricia H. Religious Devotion and Civic Division in Renaissance Venice : the Case of Lorenzo Giustiniani. In: La religion civique à l’époque médiévale et moderne (chrétienté et islam) Actes du colloque organisé par le Centre de recherche «Histoire sociale et culturelle de l'Occident. XIIe-XVIIIe siècle» de l'Université de Paris X-Nanterre et l'Institut universitaire de France (Nanterre, 21-23 juin 1993) Rome : École Française de Rome, 1995. pp. 297-308. (Publications de l'École française de Rome, 213