Dimensions
129 x 197 x 23mm
The Woman of Her Age.
The twelfth-century German Abbess, Hildegard of Bingen, would have been remarkable in any age. Today, her growing reputation as a composer of religious music has overshadowed the astonishing variety of her accomplishments and her part in the scientific cultural and theological revolution of the pre-Renaissance, from religion and mysticism to medicine and sex. 'Scivias', her book of apocalyptic visions, with its extraordinary and compelling illustrations, would alone have been enough to ensure here lasting fame.
The story of Hildegard's life from her entry into a monastery at Disibodenberg on the Rhine as a child through the explosion of her pent-up genius in middle years to her eventual admission to the German canon of saints is here told against a rich background of the years of the Crusades, the flowering of monasticism, Papal schism and heresy.
The forceful character that emerges challenges any image of demurely subjugated womanhood associated with the period. Hildegard's story is as fascinating as that of any figure in the Middle Ages and she and her musical legacy continue to be the subject of debate a thousand years later.