From Madrid to Purgatory: The Art and Craft of Dying in Sixteenth-Century SpainThis book reveals the workings of a culture that cherished death, and invested its resources in the pursuit of heaven. In sixteenth-century Spain, the social and economic debts of the living were also extended to the dead, and its central paradigms sought to invert perceptions, making death seem better than life itself. This is the first full-length study of this phenomenon. It differs from previous histories of death in two significant ways: in its methodology, which seeks to interweave social history and intellectual/cultural history; and in its geographical and cultural setting (previous studies have focused on France, Italy, and England). As a history of mentalities focused on a subject of universal significance, From Madrid to Purgatory transcends its Spanishness and its time period while being wholly attentive to them. |
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Contents
Death and the sun | 1 |
Eager for heaven Death and the testamentary discourse in Madrid 15201599 | 17 |
Wills and the history of death in Madrid | 19 |
Approaching the divine tribunal | 62 |
Relinquishing ones body | 87 |
Impressing God and neighbor | 114 |
Planning for the souls journey | 168 |
Aiding the needy aiding oneself | 232 |
Death the Spanish monarchy and the myth of sacredness | 348 |
Conclusion | 366 |
The saints heavenly corpse Teresa of Avila and the ultimate paradigm of death | 369 |
From Alba to heaven Death and the saint | 371 |
Come sweet death come swift dying The final days of Teresa of Avila | 401 |
Imperishable flesh incomparable wonder | 425 |
Earthbound no longer | 446 |
Saint Teresas apparitions | 472 |
Conclusion | 248 |
The kings dissolving body Philip II and the royal paradigm of death | 253 |
King Philip and his palace of death | 255 |
The kings many requiems | 283 |
Drawing lessons from the kings death | 300 |
Defending the faith through ritual | 322 |
Conclusion | 502 |
In death as in life From the daily rounds of hell to the vestibule of heaven | 511 |
535 | |
555 | |
Other editions - View all
From Madrid to Purgatory: The Art and Craft of Dying in Sixteenth-Century Spain Carlos M. N. Eire No preview available - 1995 |
Common terms and phrases
According accounts afterlife AHPM Alba apparitions appeared asked attitudes Avila became began believed body burial buried Carmelite Catholic Christian church claimed clergy concern considered continued convent court dead death devotion dying early Escorial especially example fact faith Father final Francisco function funeral gestures Gracián grave hand heaven holy images increase instance Jesús Juan king later living Madrid Maria masses means miracles monarch muerte natural needed never nuns offered one's person Philip poor popular possible practice prayers presence priest purgatory reales relics remained reported requested revealed Ribera ritual royal sacred saints Santa seemed Sermones served sisters sixteenth century social society soul Spain Spanish specific spiritual symbolic Teresa testators thought throughout tion true wanted Yepes