-
radical convulsionnaire phenomenon is
difficult to
state with precision. As
historian Brian E.
Strayer has noted,
almost all of the
convulsionnaires were...
- ISBN 9781845195168. Maire, Catherine-Laurence (1985). Les
convulsionnaires de Saint-Médard [The
Convulsionnaires of Saint-Médard] (in French). Paris:
Archives Gallimard...
- of a more
radical group of
clerics known as the
Convulsionnaires of Saint-Médard. The
Convulsionnaires believed that
going into a
trance and
having convulsions...
-
considerable and
threatening re****tion.
Under Louis XV,
around 250
Catholic convulsionnaires,
often called Jansenists, were
detained in the
Bastille for
their religious...
-
Jansenists and
Convulsionnaires in France, 1640–1799. Brighton, UK: Sus****
Academic Press. P. F. Matthieu,
Histoire des
miracles et des
convulsionnaires de St...
- people. The most well-known
event described by
Hecker was that of the
Convulsionnaires in France.
After his book on the
dancing mania, Hecker's
research on...
- Mar., 1994, 104.
Brian E. Strayer,
Suffering Saints:
Jansenists and
Convulsionnaires in France, 1640-1799, (Sus****
Academic Press, 2012), 67. "Martyrs'...
- Medard. Saint-Médard (disambiguation), a list of
places named after him
Convulsionnaires of Saint-Médard
Catholic Church in
France Saint Medardus,
patron saint...
-
chapel along the way, the
pilgrims encounter a
group of
Jansenist convulsionnaire nuns who are
nailing one of
their group to a cross. Outside, a Jesuit...
-
experiment Causality Clinical study design Construct (philosophy)
Convulsionnaires of Saint-Médard
Correlation does not
imply causation Design of experiments...