Bibliografie

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Auteur Titel Type [ Jaar(Desc)]
Filters: Auteur is Faesen, Rob  [Alle filters opschonen]
2014
De Baere, G. (2014). Ruusbroec in Edition: Manuscript and Print. In J. Arblaster & Faesen, R. (Red.), A Companion to John of Ruusbroec (Vol. 51, pp. 81-99). Leiden-Boston: Brill.
Schepers, K. (2014). Ruusbroec in Latin: Impulses and Impediments. In J. Arblaster & Faesen, R. (Red.), A Companion to John of Ruusbroec (Vol. 51, pp. 237-285). Leiden-Boston: Brill.
Van Nieuwenhove, R. (2014). Ruusbroec, Jordaens, and Herp on the Common Life: The Transformation of a Spiritual Ideal. In J. Arblaster & Faesen, R. (Red.), A Companion to John of Ruusbroec (Vol. 51, pp. 204-236). Leiden-Boston: Brill.
Andriessen, J. (2014). Ruusbroec’s Influence Until c.1800. In J. Arblaster & Faesen, R. (Red.), A Companion to John of Ruusbroec (Vol. 51, pp. 286-302). Leiden-Boston: Brill.
Noë, H.. (2014). Ruusbroec the Author. In J. Arblaster & Faesen, R. (Red.), A Companion to John of Ruusbroec (Vol. 51, pp. 100-129). Leiden-Boston: Brill.
Faesen, R. (2014). “We Were Perplexed by What he Wrote”. The Carthusians and a Crucial Moment in the Development of Mystical Literature in the Low Countries. In K. Pansters (Red.), The Carthusians in the Low Countries. Studies in Monastic History and Heritage (Vol. 4, pp. 217-232). Leuven: Peeters.
2019
Faesen, R. (2019). Begijnen en het ontstaan van de literatuur in de volkstaal: De raadselachtige Hadewijch. In A. De Preter, Gielis, M., & Lamberigts, M. (Red.), Gelovige en verstandige vrouwen maken geschiedenis. Over begijnen en begijnhoven in context (pp. 57-73). Antwerpen: Halewijn.
Faesen, R. (2019). The first printing of Thomas a Kempis. 1473. In W. François, Watteeuw, L., & Kenis, L. (Red.), Manuscripts & Precious Books in the Maurits Sabbe Library - KU Leuven (pp. 26-27). Leuven: Peeters.
2020
Faesen, R. (2020). In actione contemplativus: An Ideal of the Devotio Moderna and Some Antecedents in Spiritual Authors from the Low Countries. In J. - M. Auwers & Vanysacker, D. (Red.), Pulchritudo tam antiqua et tam nova: Studies in History of Christianity in Honour of Mathijs Lamberigts (Vol. 107, pp. 111-128). Turnhout: Brepols.
2024
McGinn, B. (2024). Annihilated Women in the Thirteenth Century. In J. Arblaster & Faesen, R. (Red.), Medieval Mystical Women in the West. Growing in the Height of Love (pp. 39-57). London: Routledge.
Hoyt, K. (2024). Gender and Feminine Virtue in Bernard of Clairvaux and Hadewijch. In J. Arblaster & Faesen, R. (Red.), Medieval Mystical Women in the West. Growing in the Height of Love (pp. 98-116). London: Routledge.
Slaubaugh, S. (2024). The Mystic as Symbol. Ecstasy as Liturgical Participation in the Vita of Beatrice of Nazareth. In J. Arblaster & Faesen, R. (Red.), Medieval Mystical Women in the West. Growing in the Height of Love (pp. 185-205). London: Routledge.
Romagnoli, A. Bartolomei. (2024). Mystical Hagiography in the Thirteenth Century: The Low Countries and Italy. In J. Arblaster & Faesen, R. (Red.), Medieval Mystical Women in the West. Growing in the Height of Love (pp. 14-38). London: Routledge.
Shahan, L. (2024). Mysticism by the Numbers: Beatrice of Nazareth’s Seven Manners of Love and Ida of Nivelles' ‘Eight Topics of Contemplation’. In J. Arblaster & Faesen, R. (Red.), Medieval Mystical Women in the West. Growing in the Height of Love (pp. 145-163). London: Routledge.
Langley, A. J. (2024). Spiritual Edifices. Beatrice of Nazareth’s Monastery of the Heart and Agnes Blannbekin’s Urban Stations of Christ. In J. Arblaster & Faesen, R. (Red.), Medieval Mystical Women in the West. Growing in the Height of Love (pp. 164-184). London: Routledge.
Van Nieuwenhove, R., & Faesen, R.. (2024). The Theological Virtues, Interiorisation, and Theological Anthropology in The Evangelical Pearl. In J. Arblaster (Red.), Medieval Mystical Women in the West. Growing in the Height of Love (pp. 268-292). London: Routledge.

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