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Illuminations: A Novel of Hildegard von Bingen

por Mary Sharratt

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4243558,751 (3.86)29
A novel based on the true story of Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179), who was offered by her parents as a tithe to the Church as a young child and who triumphed to become a powerful abbess, composer, prophet and polymath.
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Mostrando 1-5 de 35 (seguinte | mostrar todos)
It was ok. Not particularly entertaining, nor entrancing, and I ended up learning a lot less about Hildegard Von Bingen than I thought I would. Meh. ( )
  73pctGeek | Mar 5, 2024 |
Hildegard von Bingen is probably one of the most fascinating figures of the Medieval era that we know about.
Overall, I enjoyed this book. It offered an intimate look into the life of a fascinating character. However, I felt that the main character was not Hildegard of Bingen that I know about from the historical sources.

I felt that Mary Sharratt wrote for a particular audience who wanted Hildegard more subversive than mystical, more a feminist than a Christian nun. In reality, she could have been all these things to an extent, but the way Sharratt portrays her seems anachronistic.

If only there was more emphasis on the mystical, religious experience, that would make Hildegard more authentic to me. In this book, her faith was described more like background noise, than something that she was wholeheartedly celebrating in everything she did.

Also, some things felt like forced dramatic elements: the depiction of Jutta as the "bride of death", her brother as sexually abusing her and sapphic feelings between Hildegard and her fellow nun.

That aside, the first part of the novel was especially poignant. The life of an anchorite is described in such great detail. It was very moving, terrifying really.

So, for me, this is a 3.5 stars read, rounded up to 4 because it did hold my attention to the end, despite its flaws. ( )
  ZeljanaMaricFerli | Mar 4, 2024 |
A historical novel of the middle ages centered on a women who lived an extraordinary life, Hildegard von Bingen. The author captures the essence of the age and the wonders of an abbess who was a composer of music and a healer. Her mystic visions are presented alongside her less that risk averse behavior in a fascinating age. ( )
  jwhenderson | Jul 19, 2023 |
Young Hildegard was the tenth child of an aristocratic family. While her father and two oldest brothers are away fighting in the Crusades for literally decades, Hildegard’s mother starts arranging marriages for her daughters. Hildegard has had strange visions all her life so her mom decides that she will be the family’s gift to the Church. She arranges for Hildegard to accompany Jutta, a higher-ranking noble who wants to become an anchorite at the monastery at Disibodenberg in Germany. Hildegard is only eight years old and doesn’t understand exactly what her future holds.

When the two girls arrive at the monastery, the monks hold a service for the dead to symbolize their passage from the world of the flesh and wall them into two tiny cells that they share. One of the rooms is a courtyard open to the sky and the other has a screen for food to pass through and for conversation. But the girls are never allowed to leave and are expected to live a life of religious prayer and contemplation. Hildegard has always loved the woods and the outdoors and she’s desperate to find a way out. She does feel called to serve God but she knows this is not her path.

I first became interested in Hildegard von Bingen (St. Hildegard) when author Clemency Burton-Hill mentioned her as a composer in Year of Wonder. Ms. Burton-Hill included a brief biography but I was curious to know more. I was thrilled to find this work of historical fiction, although I did wonder how much was history and how much was fiction. The author addresses that at the end. The essential facts are all correct although there is some discrepancy among the source material regarding the age when Hildegard entered the monastery.

The Hildegard in these pages was fascinating. She was a strategist but she also had a heart to care for others. She was “only” a woman but she was a woman with connections and she wasn’t afraid to use them. As she grew older, she called out hypocrisy and inhumane practices. God was always female in her visions. She was an avid learner and read through any books the monks would give her. She trained to be a healer and she became a composer whose work is still fairly widely performed. The breadth of her accomplishments would be remarkable even today; they were almost unfathomable in the twelfth century.

The novel is on the shorter side, at 294 pages in my e-book. I wish the author had spent a bit more time on the final years of Hildegard’s life. The bulk of the story is devoted to her time as an anchorite but I would have liked to read more about her time in the wider world.

If you’re curious, the book is only “religious” in the sense that the author based it on a religious figure. I certainly didn’t feel that there was any sort of Christian agenda.

I highly recommend this if you’re interested in historical fiction about extraordinary women. ( )
  JG_IntrovertedReader | Sep 12, 2021 |
Once again, historical fiction has led me to a person and a subject I otherwise knew nothing about. I really had no idea that there was such a thing as anchorages and women (nuns) who became anchorites. These women willingly gave themselves to a monastery to be literally walled in, never seeing the outside world, for the rest of their days. In Illuminations, Hildegard von Bingen is forced to enter an anchorage with a girl (Jutta) who is perceived as the holiest of holy. However, her reasons for committing herself to this fate were brought on by a dark secret. Hildegard spends 30 years there with Jutta, watching her slowly waste away. Only after her death is she finally able to break free.

Having had visions since an early age that she thought meant she was wicked, or that there was something wrong with her, Hildegard came to realize in her long isolation that these were indeed visions of the divine. Once she was given her freedom, she was able to speak out about her visions and write about them. With her fellow sisters, who were also oblates of the anchorage, she works for those in monastic life to know love, the love of God, not to live in cruelty such as the life inside an anchorage most surely was.

Hildegard von Bingen became a saint. Her life and work still inspires people today. She had very diverse and complex ideas and many have viewed her as a religious reformer. I am so glad that I was able to learn about this woman. Mary Sharratt has brought to life in great historical detail a story that should be read by all. I cannot express how much I recommend this book. ( )
  TheTrueBookAddict | Mar 22, 2020 |
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A novel based on the true story of Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179), who was offered by her parents as a tithe to the Church as a young child and who triumphed to become a powerful abbess, composer, prophet and polymath.

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