MURAL - Maynooth University Research Archive Library



    Steadfast saints or malleable models? : Seventeenth-century Irish hagiography revisited


    Ryan, Salvador (2005) Steadfast saints or malleable models? : Seventeenth-century Irish hagiography revisited. The Catholic Historical Review, 91 (2). pp. 251-277. ISSN 0008-8080

    [img] Download (179kB)


    Share your research

    Twitter Facebook LinkedIn GooglePlus Email more...



    Add this article to your Mendeley library


    Abstract

    At one of the last sessions of the Council of Trent, the question of the role of saints within the Church was addressed. While the fathers upheld the value of venerating images and relics of the saints, they nevertheless admitted that there had been some abuses of their cults in the past. This led effectively to an effort to regulate and reform the process of canonization,by which saints were made, involving a greater control over the creation of saints by the authorities in Rome in order to avoid the further growth of dubious local cults that ranged from the benign to the bizarre.1 In other words, recognition of the sacred was centralized. 2 In the wake of the Council, and amidst criticisms of the previously accepted view of sainthood from reformers within and without the Church alike, the official reaction of church authorities was indecisive. Thus, from the close of the Council in 1563 until 1588, when the Congregation of Sacred Rites and Ceremonies was established to oversee canonizations, there were no new saints officially recognized within the Catholic Church.3 One of the problems facing the Church was the prevalence of what was now considered to be questionable material in the lives of even the officially recognized saints.A more historically critical method of outlining the lives of saints was required if the idea of sainthood was going to retain any credibility in a rapidly changing Europe. In order to achieve this, the construction of new lives would have to attain certain standards and, concomitantly, old lives that were deficient in this area necessitated amendment. Peter Burke sees evidence of this new and more critical approach to the lives of saints in the work of Erasmus on the life of St. Jerome.

    Item Type: Article
    Keywords: Seventeenth-century Irish hagiography;
    Academic Unit: St Patrick's College, Maynooth > Faculty of Theology
    Item ID: 2303
    Depositing User: Prof. Salvador Ryan
    Date Deposited: 09 Dec 2010 16:04
    Journal or Publication Title: The Catholic Historical Review
    Publisher: The Catholic University of America
    Refereed: Yes
    URI:
      Use Licence: This item is available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike Licence (CC BY-NC-SA). Details of this licence are available here

      Repository Staff Only(login required)

      View Item Item control page

      Downloads

      Downloads per month over past year

      Origin of downloads