The Cistercian Cult of Saints as a Treasury of the Living Past in the Later Middle Ages

Hardback Published on: 15/06/2026
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Synopsis

This book explains how the late medieval Cistercian Order and its communities in Central Europe engaged with, adopted, and supported a broad range of saints' cults as an element of their relationship with the outside world, within their network and as an important element of their identity.

Contrary to traditional interpretations of Cistercian culture, the Order was not against the cult of saints. The liturgical calendar accommodated numerous saints, and central to Cistercian identity in the later Middle Ages was St Bernard of Clairvaux, who embodied the Order and delivered key interpretations within its monastic culture. Many individual communities were highly invested in the cult of saints as they sought to create strong local and regional belonging, maintain ties to the outside world, and control significant elements of the devotional landscape. However, the saints also cemented crucial bonds within filiations and facilitated a shared identity within geographically extensive networks. Textually, materially, visually, and ritually, cults of saints between 1300 and the early sixteenth century were an important facet of Cistercian culture; by exploring these manifestations, we can better understand late medieval monasticism on its own terms.

An analysis of the complex connection between Cistercian communities and the Order itself and a study of the monastic practice of 'living with the past', this book is a valuable contribution to the historiography of medieval monasticism and medieval religious culture.

Publisher information

  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis
  • ISBN: 9789463721363
  • Number of pages: 186
  • Weight: 520g
  • Languages: English