This multidisciplinary analysis of the cult of Radegund of Poitiers, from the sixth century to the twenty-first, illuminates the roles saints play at the intersection of gender and politics. No other medieval saint was so politically charged or had such an astonishing range of constructed personae. The many "Radegunds" encountered in this study - virgin, wife, mother, royalist, republican, colonizer - can all be interpreted as responses to contemporary political events, shifting spiritual trends, and changing attitudes towards women's role in society or the Church. The long trajectory of Radegund's meanings and functions over the centuries suggests that saints have played a more significant ideological role in state formation, nationalism, and identity politics than is typically recognized. To "rewrite" Radegund is thus to rewrite the history of the French nation, and this ground-breaking study shows how powerful medieval hagiography has been and continues to be in the emergence of nationalism and the "Myth of the French Nation."



Autorentext

Anna Katharina Rudolph is a medieval historian whose research is driven by questions of how the sacred intersects with the political to redefine women's roles in pre-Modern France. Her work explores how women navigated social limitations by using religion to achieve political power. She holds a Ph.D. in History from the University of California, Santa Barbara, USA, and is the author of "From Runaway Wife to Sainted Queen: Scandal and the Model of Saintly Queenship in the Early Middle Ages," 2025.

Titel
Rewriting History and the Myth of the French Nation
Untertitel
The Hagiography of Radegund of Poitiers from Medieval to Modernity
EAN
9781040794647
Format
E-Book (epub)
Veröffentlichung
18.11.2025
Digitaler Kopierschutz
frei
Dateigrösse
4.78 MB
Anzahl Seiten
302