The Sons of St Augustine: Art and Memory in the Augustinian Churches of Central Italy, 1256–1370

Author:   Krisztina Ilko (Junior Research Fellow, Junior Research Fellow, Queens' College, University of Cambridge)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198948827


Pages:   464
Publication Date:   11 December 2025
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained


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The Sons of St Augustine: Art and Memory in the Augustinian Churches of Central Italy, 1256–1370


Overview

The Order of the Hermits of St Augustine has long been sidelined as a pale imitator of the Franciscans. This book provides a fundamental cross-disciplinary re-evaluation of the lives, ideas, and impact of the Augustinian friars. By challenging the scholarly focus on the urban sphere in communal Italy, it explores the rapid emergence of Augustinian convents as lively religious and artistic centres on the margins of cities and in the Italian countryside. Moreover, it demonstrates for the first time the existence of common intellectual themes which linked together dispersed Augustinian communities. Fired by contemporary debates about the antiquity of the Order, the Augustinian friars forged a fictive past in which they linked their origins to St Augustine and late antique hermits. The book argues that saints, objects, and the natural environment all played a vital part in brokering the Augustinian ethos. This is underpinned by tracing the 'things' the Hermits commissioned, inherited, and accumulated to become the 'heirs of St Augustine'. Their forged antiquity was promoted not only through human agencies, such as the creation of eremitical saints' cults, but also through the strategic use of the liminal position of their convents, reinventing the Augustinian hermitages as places of power on the margins of the human sphere and the untamed natural environment. At stake here is the extent of religious patronage in the rural landscape and the re-evaluation of the long-standing tension between city and countryside in the medieval imaginary. Ultimately, this book not only challenges the prevailing understanding of the mendicant movement as a quintessentially urban phenomenon, but also sheds new light on broader processes of medieval societies in forging narratives of power, prestige, and antiquity through materiality and the natural environment.

Full Product Details

Author:   Krisztina Ilko (Junior Research Fellow, Junior Research Fellow, Queens' College, University of Cambridge)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.20cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 24.50cm
Weight:   0.933kg
ISBN:  

9780198948827


ISBN 10:   0198948824
Pages:   464
Publication Date:   11 December 2025
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   To order   Availability explained

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Author Information

Krisztina Ilko is a Junior Research Fellow at Queens' College and Affiliated Lecturer in History at the University of Cambridge. Prior to that, she held a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship at the Faculty of History at the University of Oxford in conjunction with Trinity College, Oxford, and a Mellon Fellowship at the University of Toronto. She completed her PhD as a Lander Scholar at Pembroke College, Cambridge, from which she spent the last two years at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. She has published articles in The English Historical Review, The Journal of Ecclesiastical History, Gesta, and Speculum.

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