Papers by Katrinette Bodarwé
Bücherschätze der rheinischen Kulturgeschichte, hg. von Heinz Finger, Düsseldorf 2001, 2001
Historisches Jahrbuch für den Kreis Herford 19, 2012
Zugänge zu Archäologie, Bau-forschung und Kunstgeschichte - nicht nur in Westfalen: Festschrift für Uwe Lobbedey zum 80. Geburtstag, hg. von Mareike Liedmann, Verena Smit, 2017
gemeinsam mit Clemens Kosch
Das dritte Stift. Forschungen zum Quedlinburger Frauenstift (Essener Forschungen zum Frauenstift 14), hg. von Stephan Freund, Thomas Labusiak, 2017
919 - Plötzlich König. Heinrich I. und Quedlinburg (Schriftenreihe des Zentrums für Mittelalterausstellungen Magdeburg / 5), hg. von Gabriele Köster, Stephan Freund, 2019
Early Medieval Europe, 2000
Nonnen, Kanonissen und Mystikerinnen. Religiöse Frauengemeinschaften in Süddeutschland, 2008
Female vita religiosa between Late Antiquity and the High Middle Ages. Structures, developments and spatial contexts, 2011
Medizinhistorisches Journal, 2003
If one looks for medical knowledge in medieval monasteries ("Klostermedizin"), the name... more If one looks for medical knowledge in medieval monasteries ("Klostermedizin"), the name of Hildegard of Bingen immediately comes to mind. However, it is rarely considered that medieval nunneries had very different social conditions compared to those of their male counterparts: they had different rules, stricter enclosure and fewer opportunities for education. Therefore we cannot assume that medicine had the same significance in women's as in men's monasteries. A look at the libraries and surviving manuscript collections of nunneries shows that there was very little interest in medical topics. An examination of the few known sources on medically active nuns reveals similar problems. Although some communities supported their own hospitals, the nuns did not generally nurse the ill and poor themselves. This holds also true, in general, for beguines and sisters of the hospitallers. Most of the monasteries had an infirmary for sick and aged sisters of their own communiti...
Les nomina abbatum de Conques presentes dans cet article en edition critique sont un petit ouvrag... more Les nomina abbatum de Conques presentes dans cet article en edition critique sont un petit ouvrage historiographique compose par un moine de Conques entre 1108 et 1125 et transmis par des copies mo...
Medizinhistorisches Journal, 2003
If one looks for medical knowledge in medieval monasteries ("Klostermedizin"), the name... more If one looks for medical knowledge in medieval monasteries ("Klostermedizin"), the name of Hildegard of Bingen immediately comes to mind. However, it is rarely considered that medieval nunneries had very different social conditions compared to those of their male counterparts: they had different rules, stricter enclosure and fewer opportunities for education. Therefore we cannot assume that medicine had the same significance in women's as in men's monasteries. A look at the libraries and surviving manuscript collections of nunneries shows that there was very little interest in medical topics. An examination of the few known sources on medically active nuns reveals similar problems. Although some communities supported their own hospitals, the nuns did not generally nurse the ill and poor themselves. This holds also true, in general, for beguines and sisters of the hospitallers. Most of the monasteries had an infirmary for sick and aged sisters of their own communiti...
A Companion to Hrotsvit of Gandersheim (fl. 960), 2012
Skriptorien - Werke - Mäzene, 2013
Archiv für Diplomatik, 2000
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Papers by Katrinette Bodarwé