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5 - Private hopes, public claims? Paradisus and sinus Abrahae in prayer and liturgy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 October 2009

Ananya Jahanara Kabir
Affiliation:
Trinity College, Cambridge
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Summary

Suscipiat te christus qui creavit te et in sinum abrahae angeli deducant te.

Dirigas angelum pacis qui custodiat animam meam et perducat eam in locum refrigerii, et pertransire faciat intrepidam principatus et potestates tenebrarum.

Obsecro te domine praesta mihi post obitum meum prosperum iter ad perennis paradisi peruenire suauitatem. Ibique cum sanctis animabus mihi requiescere liceat usque ad tempus resurrectionis.

Three separate terms for the soul's post-mortem destination are seen in these supplications for the soul's safety after death. An antiphon from the funeral mass refers to the soul's journey to the sinus Abrahae, while the terms locus refrigerii and paradisus appear in two Anglo-Latin prayers preserved in the Royal Prayerbook (London, British Library, Royal 2. A. xx) and the Book of Cerne (Cambridge University Library, Ll. 1. 10) respectively. This chapter charts the shifting fortunes of the definitions sinus Abrahae, locus refrigerii and paradisus in the larger literary groups represented by these texts – the early medieval funeral liturgy, and Anglo-Latin prayers from the eighth and ninth centuries. By analysing the contrasting use of these terms within private prayer and public worship, I explore further that monastic ambivalence towards the concept of the interim paradise, which we have already discerned in the writings of Bede and Ælfric.

Four prayerbooks, codicologically similar and with several textual links, were compiled for private devotion in Southumbrian monasteries between the latter half of the eighth century and the beginning of the ninth.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2001

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