 
              
    
            Format: Hardback
        
        
        
        
            Pages: 236
          
                              
            ISBN: 9780812247152
          
                              
            Pub Date: June 2015
          
                                                            
                          Imprint: Pennsylvania University Press
                      
                              
            Illustrations: b/w illus
          
                    
                Sale Price:
      
      
                £12.95
            
                  RRP: £45.00
      
  
          
          
          
                          In stock
                      
        
          Description:
      
      
        In 1384, a poor and illiterate peasant woman called Ermine moved to the city of Reims with her elderly husband. Her era was troubled by war, plague, and papal schism within the Catholic Church, and Ermine could easily have slipped unobserved through the cracks of history. After her relocation and the loss of her husband, however, things took a remarkable but frightening turn. For the last ten months of her life, Ermine was tormented by nightly visions of angels and demons. In her nocturnal terrors, she was attacked by animals, beaten and kidnapped by devils in disguise, and exposed to carnal spectacles; on other nights, she was blessed by saints, even visited by the Virgin Mary. Her strange case was confessed to and recorded in vivid detail by an Augustinian friar known as Jean le Graveur.Was Ermine a saint in the making, an impostor, an incipient witch, or a madwoman? Renate Blumenfeld-Kosinski seeks a resolution to these questions through the historical and theological context of this troubled woman's experiences. With empathy and acuity, Blumenfeld-Kosinski examines Ermine's life in fourteenth-century Reims, her relationship with her confessor, her ascetic and devotional practices, and her reported encounters with heavenly and hellish beings. Supplemented by translated excerpts from Jean's account, The Strange Case of Ermine de Reims brings to life an episode that helped precipitate one of the major clerical controversies of late medieval Europe, revealing surprising truths about the era's conceptions of piety and possession.
      
      
       
    