
Harlots of the Desert
By Benedicta Ward
Subjects: Ex-prostitutes, Prostitutes in literature, Reue, Women, Heilige, Sources, Monastic and religious life, Religious life, Repentance, Repentance -- Christianity -- History of, Doctrines -- Early church, ca. 30-600, Women in Christianity, Monastic and religious life of women, Nuns -- Middle East -- History, History of doctrines, Nuns, Christianity, Middle east, social life and customs, Prostitutes, Legends, Christian women saints, History, Ex-prostitutes -- Religious life -- Middle East, Prostitution
Description: Stories of conversion have always attracted mankind's attention, and this was especially so among the monks of the ancient and medieval world. In the literature of fourth-century Egypt, alongside the wise sayings of the Desert Fathers and the stories illustrating their way of life, there are also the accounts of the lives of the harlots, Pelagia, Maria, Thaïs, Mary of Egypt and a number of lesser figures, all of which were copied, translated and retold througout the Middle Ages. This is a commentary on early monastic texts with a discussion of the theme of Christian repentance. The author begins with St. Mary Magdalene, the archetypal penitent, and goes on to examine the desert tradition, concluding each chapter with new translations of those lives which were most influential in the early Church and for countless generations afterwards.
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