Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/128280
Title: Fuga mundi and its application to female monastic life in seventeenth-century Malta
Other Titles: Fuga mundi : studies on monasticism in late antiquity and early modern Malta
Authors: Doublet, Nicholas Joseph
Keywords: Monasticism and religious orders for women -- Malta -- History -- 17th century
Catholic Church -- Malta -- History -- 17th century
Nuns -- Malta -- History -- 17th century
Malta -- Church history -- 17th century
Issue Date: 2024
Publisher: University of Malta. Department of Church History, Patrology & Palaeochristian Archaeology
Citation: Doublet, N. J. (2024). Fuga mundi : studies on monasticism in late antiquity and early modern Malta. In J. Farrugia (Ed.), Fuga mundi : studies on monasticism in late antiquity and early modern Malta (pp. 35-57). Mata: University of Malta. Department of Church History, Patrology & Palaeochristian Archaeology.
Abstract: The origins of monasticism in Malta are lost in the mists of unknown ages. Several traditions exist of ascetics living at Mellieha and Rabat in Malta and Qala in Gozo. However, no written documentation exists to support them. The earliest documentary sources known to date are the letters of Gregory the Greatwhich, while dealing with issues in the Local Church, include references to monastic communities. There is no evidence that these existed in Malta. Documentary sources from monasteries established in Malta only emerge from the fifteenth-century onwards. This study will first delve into the emergence of monasticism in a Christian context and then will proceed to focus on these earliest documents that detail monastic life on the island in the modern period.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/128280
ISBN: 9789918008070
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacTheCHPPA

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