Julian of Norwich
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About this ebook
Over six hundred years ago a woman known as Julian of Norwich wrote what is now regarded as one of the greatest works of literature in English. Based on a sequence of mystical visions she received in 1373, her book is called Revelations of Divine Love.
Julian lived through an age of political and religious turmoil, as well as through the misery of the Black Death, and her writing engages with timeless questions about life, love and the meaning of suffering. But who was Julian of Norwich? And what can she teach us today?
Medievalist and TV historian Janina Ramirez invites you to join her in exploring Julian’s remarkable life and times, offering insights into how and why her writing has survived, and what we can learn from this fourteenth-century mystic whose work lay hidden in the shadows of her male contemporaries for far too long.
Janina Ramirez
Janina Ramirez is the course director on the Undergraduate Certificate and Diploma in History of Art at Oxford University. She has written and presented numerous BBC history documentaries, and is the author of The Private Lives of the Saints: Power, passion and politics in Anglo-Saxon England (W. H. Allen, 2015). Her most recent TV documentaries include ‘Chivalry and Betrayal: The Hundred Years’ War’ (2013), ‘Architects of the Divine: The First Gothic Age’ (2014), ‘Saints and Sinners: Britain’s Millennium of Monasteries’ (2015), ‘The Art of the Vikings: Secret Knowledge’ (March 2016) and ‘The Search for the Lost Manuscript: Julian of Norwich’ (July 2016).
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Reviews for Julian of Norwich
15 ratings1 review
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Book received from NetGalley.The first time I had ever heard about Julian of Norwich was in my first British Literature class and I was fascinated by her. Her "Revelations of a Divine Love" are the earliest known surviving by a female writer. As soon as I saw this offered on NetGalley I requested it hoping to learn a bit more about this unique nun. Since Julian of Norwich lived in the Medieval era there is very little that can be found out about her life, prior to her becoming an anchoress. The book gives a bit more insight into her writing and just how rare something like this is. I suggest the book for those who study literature and history both since it will give more information on women writers in Medieval Britain.
Book preview
Julian of Norwich - Janina Ramirez
Part 1
THE HISTORY
1
Introducing Julian
Revelations of Divine Love is not an autobiography, in that it contains virtually no details about the life and times of its author. Julian is remarkably absent from her text. We learn nothing about her childhood, whether she had a family, where she lived, what occupied her outside prayer and contemplation. However, it is a spiritual autobiography, charting the inner journey of Julian’s mind and soul following a set of sixteen revelations that she received at the age of thirty. It charts her constant struggle to engage with the big questions of life: Who is God? How should we know him? Does sin exist? How can we survive in a life full of pain and suffering? What is the purpose of my life on earth? In this respect her text exists outside its time, and can be as relevant, comforting and thought-provoking now as it was in the fourteenth century.
‘Julian of Norwich’s day was a long time coming.’¹ All commentators on Julian’s Revelations of Divine Love agree that her work has stayed in the shadows for too long. When it first appeared in print some three hundred years after it was written, it received the harshest of reviews. Bishop Stillingfleet declared it the ‘fantastic revelations of a distempered brain’. Written in Middle English, containing mystical visions gleaned through meditation upon a gory gothic image of Christ, and steeped in Catholic medieval ideas, Julian’s text fared poorly in post-Reformation England. As monasteries were dismantled and images attacked, so texts such as the Revelations of Divine Love were destroyed, scorned and driven underground. Yet it found a way to survive down the centuries, largely through the dedication of a sequence of intellectual, strong and determined women. That we even have Julian’s text today is little short of a miracle, and despite being a long time coming, her day is now.
One issue readers of Julian’s text can encounter, whether they read the original or a sensitive translation, is that she wrote in Middle English. Her dialect, East Anglian, is not as complicated to read as some other fourteenth-century texts, but it can still be startling for a modern reader. Some words appear recognizable, for example ‘behovely’, and yet their meaning can be complex and rooted specifically in the time and place in which they were written. Reading Julian out loud in the original can be a good way to hear the meaning of her phrases. It also allows the beauty of her prose to be truly effective. The pronunciation of her vowels is slightly longer and higher than our modern equivalents, and closer to a broad northern accent than a modern Norwich one.
Her text survives in two versions, known as the ‘Short Text’ and the ‘Long Text’. The first may have been written as early as 1388, shortly after Julian had her revelations, while the longer version, which contains an expanded and more sophisticated set of ruminations on her visions, could have been recorded late in her life. The Short Text survives in a single copy, made in the fifteenth century, and it has an immediacy and spontaneity to it that may indicate it was recorded from recent memory. The Long Text shows a greater degree of authorial consciousness, and the theology is far more developed, which may indicate that it has been worked and reworked over a number of years. It is remarkable that we have both versions surviving. Whatever the timings of the Short and Long Texts, to have two different accounts of Julian’s Revelations of Divine Love suggests that the little historical information we have about Julian’s life is borne out by the manuscripts; she had her visions, became an anchoress, lived for a long time afterwards, and continually returned to her revelations as she ruminated on them day after day, year after year.
All Julian wants us to know about her she includes in her text. She was born around 1343, received her visions at the age of 30 in 1373, and was still alive in 1416. She had many years to develop her understanding of what was shown to her over a period of three days and nights as she lay dying. To understand fully what she believed were ‘divine shewings’, she took the seemingly drastic step of being enclosed as an anchoress inside a cell, which was probably to the north side of the Church of St Julian, on King Street in Norwich. Becoming an anchoress around the age of 43, she lived on for up to thirty years in one room, her only door to the world walled up, and her enclosure confirmed by the last rites. This saw her as effectively dead to this world. In watching her own last rites she was a witness at her own funeral, and her existence within the cell was akin to living within a tomb.
Medieval mysticism
The text that she produced while locked within her cell is best described as ‘medieval mysticism’. All major world religions have a mystical element, and it can be understood as ‘a personal, unmediated approach to, and attainment of, a direct apprehension of God’ (Oxford English Dictionary). By the fourteenth century, when Julian wrote Revelations of Divine Love, the mystical tradition was gathering momentum across Europe and becoming extremely popular. Hildegard of Bingen was one of the first female mystics to establish the tradition. She was a remarkable woman, who in the twelfth century experienced visions but who was also renowned for her work in medicine, music, poetry, natural history, philosophy, mathematics and linguistics. She was a nun and abbess, but as the centuries progressed, women outside convents began to experience, publicize and record visions, and priests became fascinated with them.
Mystical texts became very popular and circulated widely. Marie of Oignies was heralded as a visionary, despite being a laywoman, and she was afflicted with uncontrollable tears and ecstasies. She wore only white, ate no meat and mortified her flesh, traits that English mystics such as Margery Kempe would later assume in emulation of a medieval celebrity. One of the most famous mystics of the fourteenth century was St Bridget of Sweden, now one of the six patron saints of Europe. Like Julian, she received revelations, though hers started at the age of ten. She too saw an image of the crucifix and interacted with Christ. Extremely popular in her lifetime, her writings were later widely condemned, Martin Luther declaring her die tolle Brigit (‘the crazy Bridget’),² and William Marshall, the sixteenth-century English Protestant Reformer, encouraging people to ‘forget such prayers as those of Saint