| Robert Norman Swanson - 1995 - 402 sivua
...attendance, with 'any who can read taking the office of Our Lady with them, and with some companion reciting it in church verse by verse in a low voice, after the manner of the religious'.4 The Books of Hours clearly encouraged a private devotional tradition; their utility... | |
| Sandra J. McEntire - 1998 - 368 sivua
...who can read tak[es] the Office of our Lady with them, and with some companion recit[es] it in the church verse by verse in a low voice after the manner of the religious. "39 It was probably this office, amongst others, that Margery Kempe found so hard to... | |
| Laquita M. Higgs - 1998 - 460 sivua
...described the devotion of the English when he wrote the following, probably about townspeople: Although they all attend Mass every day, and say many Paternosters in public, ithe women carrying long rosaries in their hands, and any who can read taking the office of Our Lady... | |
| John Higgitt, British Library - 2000 - 400 sivua
...the way that those English women who could read took their 'office of our Lady' and recited it in the church Verse by verse, in a low voice, after the manner of religious'. 69 Books of hours developed as a response to the growing emphasis in later centuries of... | |
| Eamon Duffy - 2005 - 772 sivua
...n visitor to fifteenth-century England, commenting on the no ble devotion of the laity, wrote that “any who can read tak[e] the Office of our Lady with them, and with some companion me [e] it in the church verse by verse in a low voice after the ma en of the religious.” The “Instructions... | |
| Eamon Duffy - 2006 - 228 sivua
...i49OS noted that literate townspeople liked to go with a companion to church and recite their Hours 'verse by verse, in a low voice, after the manner of churchmen'." After the manner of ehurehmen - that, of course, was one of the essential features of the Book of Hours,... | |
| 200 sivua
...they are so diligent in mercantile pursuits that they do not fear to make contracts on usury. Although they all attend Mass every day and say many Paternosters in public (the women carrying long rosaries in their hands, and any who can read taking the office of our Lady with them,... | |
| 1901 - 556 sivua
...war ; ' 1 and the devotion of the people seemed to secure the continuance of their power. ' Although they all attend Mass every day, and say many Paternosters in public (the women carrying long rosaries in their hands, 1 Venetian Relation, p. 34. and any who can read taking the... | |
| 644 sivua
...are so diligent in mercantile pursuits, that they do not fear to make contracts on usury. Although they all attend Mass every day, and say many Paternosters in public, (the women carrying long rosaries in their hands, and any who can read taking the office of our Lady with them,... | |
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