Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: A Case Study of Symbolic Cognition
- 2 Conjugal and Nuptial Symbolism in Medieval Christian Thought
- 3 Marriage Symbolism and Social Reality in the New Testament: Husbands and Wives, Christ and the Church
- 4 Single Marriage and Priestly Identity: A Symbol and its Functions in Ancient Christianity
- 5 ‘Put on the Dress of a Wife, so that you Might Preserve your Virginity’: Virgins as Brides of Christ in the Writings of Tertullian
- 6 Veiled Threats: Constraining Religious Women in the Carolingian Empire
- 7 Double Standards?: Medieval Marriage Symbolism and Christian Views on the Muslim Paradise
- 8 Marriage, Maternity, and the Formation of a Sacramental Imagination: Stories for Cistercian Monks and Nuns around the Year 1200
- 9 Marriage Symbolism in Illuminated Manuscripts of the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries: Visualization and Interpretation
- 10 ‘His Left Arm is under my Head and his Right Arm shall Embrace me’: The Bride and the Bridegroom in Trastevere
- 11 Marriage in the Divine Office: Nuptial Metaphors in the Medieval Conception of the Officium
- 12 What Kind of Marriage did Pope Innocent III Really Enter into?: Marriage Symbolism and Papal Authority
- 13 ‘Please don't Mind if i got this Wrong’: Christ's Spiritual Marriage and the Law of the Late Medieval Western Church
- Index of Biblical Passages
- Index of Names
5 - ‘Put on the Dress of a Wife, so that you Might Preserve your Virginity’: Virgins as Brides of Christ in the Writings of Tertullian
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 November 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: A Case Study of Symbolic Cognition
- 2 Conjugal and Nuptial Symbolism in Medieval Christian Thought
- 3 Marriage Symbolism and Social Reality in the New Testament: Husbands and Wives, Christ and the Church
- 4 Single Marriage and Priestly Identity: A Symbol and its Functions in Ancient Christianity
- 5 ‘Put on the Dress of a Wife, so that you Might Preserve your Virginity’: Virgins as Brides of Christ in the Writings of Tertullian
- 6 Veiled Threats: Constraining Religious Women in the Carolingian Empire
- 7 Double Standards?: Medieval Marriage Symbolism and Christian Views on the Muslim Paradise
- 8 Marriage, Maternity, and the Formation of a Sacramental Imagination: Stories for Cistercian Monks and Nuns around the Year 1200
- 9 Marriage Symbolism in Illuminated Manuscripts of the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries: Visualization and Interpretation
- 10 ‘His Left Arm is under my Head and his Right Arm shall Embrace me’: The Bride and the Bridegroom in Trastevere
- 11 Marriage in the Divine Office: Nuptial Metaphors in the Medieval Conception of the Officium
- 12 What Kind of Marriage did Pope Innocent III Really Enter into?: Marriage Symbolism and Papal Authority
- 13 ‘Please don't Mind if i got this Wrong’: Christ's Spiritual Marriage and the Law of the Late Medieval Western Church
- Index of Biblical Passages
- Index of Names
Summary
Abstract
In the third century, Christian virgins began to be described as brides of Christ. The nuptial metaphor had been employed since the earliest decades of the Christian movement to speak of communal identity, with the Church being the bride, but it is not until the third century, in the writings of Tertullian of Carthage, that we first encounter the notion that specifically virgin women embody the bride. Tertullian is clear that virgins are to conduct themselves in public as wives, which includes the wearing of a veil. This chapter focuses particularly on dress to explore what kind of ‘marriage’ it was that these virgins were believed to enter into with Christ, and what this means for their social identities.
Keywords: Tertullian of Carthage; Hildegard of Bingen; veil; marriage; virgins; asceticism
Sometime in the years before she finished writing her monumental Scivias, Hildegard of Bingen (1098–1179) received a pointed letter from Tengswich, Abbess of Andernach. Infused with the sickly sweetness of false praise, Tengswich's letter took Hildegard, whose star was then rising, to task for the ‘uncustomary’ (insolitum) way in which she permitted her virgins to dress and comport themselves: Tengswich had heard that ‘on feast days your virgins stand in the church with unbound hair when singing the psalms and that as part of their dress [pro ornamento] they wear white, silk veils [velaminibus], so long that they touch the floor’. And, as if this were not sufficiently ostentatious, Hildegard's virgins also wore ‘crowns of gold filigree, into which are inserted crosses on both sides and the back, with a figure of the Lamb on the front, and […] they adorn their fingers with golden rings’. For Abbess Tengswich, this habit clearly violated the modesty that both scripture and the Church fathers so clearly wished women to practice.
Hildegard was not one to back down from a challenge. Rather than concede any point to Tengswich, she thundered in reply with the authoritative voice of the fons vivens, the ‘living fountain’. She does concede that a ‘married woman ought not to raise herself up or adorn herself by means of her hair, nor ought she to lift herself up by any loftiness of a crown or something golden [in ulla sublimitate corone et auri ullius rei], except by the will of her husband’.
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- The Symbolism of Marriage in Early Christianity and the Latin Middle AgesImages, Impact, Cognition, pp. 131 - 154Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2019