Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
- 2022 (2) (entfernen)
Dokumenttyp
Sprache
- Englisch (2) (entfernen)
Gehört zur Bibliographie
- nein (2)
Schlagworte
- Dominikanerinnen (1)
- Frauenkloster (1)
- Freiburg im Breisgau (1)
- Königstuhl 〈Heidelberg〉 (1)
- Liturgie (1)
- Milben (1)
- Ordensreform (1)
- Systematik (1)
The mite species Barbutia arasbaraniensis Mohammad-Doustaresharaf & Bagheri, 2021, until now only known from four specimens from Iran, was discovered in epilithic crustose lichen on the Königstuhl mountain in Heidelberg in Germany. It is designated as the type species of the new taxon Albertibarbutia gen. nov. Based on the new collection material, a supplementary description of the species is provided and facets of its taxonomy and morphology are discussed. The homologies of the setae and solenidia of both the legs and the pedipalps of Albertibarbutia are indicated. The family
Barbutiidae Robaux, 1975 is rediagnosed, its phylogenetic relationships are commented on and it is here recorded for Germany for the first time.
Liturgy has often served as a source for studying the identities of medieval religious
communities through examining local saints and special chants or ceremonies. This article
deepens such approaches by considering the practice of liturgical coordination, which
required each convent to reconcile the obligations imposed upon it by the order to
which it belonged, the diocese in which it lay, and the personal networks of its sisters.
The shifting dates of the Easter cycle created a wide variety of possible calendrical conflicts
and necessitated that each convent’s liturgical practice be organized anew every year.
Focusing on German-language liturgical manuals from Observant Dominican convents,
this article introduces these sources and examines the various obligations, authorities,
and sources of advice that Dominican sisters coordinated when planning each year’s
liturgy. It then turns to the concrete example of a major calendrical conflict on May 1,
1519, which illustrates how convents negotiated their networked obligations and defended
their decisions. Supplementing traditional sources such as chronicles and charters,
liturgical administrative documents reveal how each convent’s liturgical identity was
both iterative and networked and how the tensions between these features opened up
spaces for assertive decision-making.