Bentang Pustaka
We are a publisher of quality books for Indonesia. Very passionate about educating the nation.
View Rights PortalWe are a publisher of quality books for Indonesia. Very passionate about educating the nation.
View Rights PortalMedievalists have long taught that highly emotional Christian devotion, often called 'affective piety', appeared in Europe after the twelfth century and was primarily practiced by communities of mendicants, lay people and women. Emotional monasticism challenges this view. The first study of affective piety in an eleventh-century monastic context, it traces the early history of affective devotion through the life and works of the earliest known writer of emotional prayers, John of Fécamp, abbot of the Norman monastery of Fécamp from 1028-78. Exposing the early medieval monastic roots of later medieval affective piety, the book casts a new light on the devotional life of monks in Europe before the twelfth century and redefines how medievalists should teach the history of Christianity.
Over six hundred years before John Milton's Paradise Lost, Anglo-Saxon authors told their own version of the fall of the angels. This book brings together various cultural moments, literary genres and relevant comparanda to recover that version, from the legal and social world to the world of popular spiritual ritual and belief. The story of the fall of the angels in Anglo-Saxon England is the story of a successfully transmitted exegetical teaching turned rich literary tradition. It can be traced through a range of genres - sermons, saints' lives, royal charters, riddles, devotional and biblical poetry - each one offering a distinct window into the ancient myth's place within the Anglo-Saxon literary and cultural imagination.
Accompanied by Konrad the Benedictiner novice Faolán is banished in the strongly regulated Columbanian monastery. There seem to be some kind of foul deeds behind the scenes, though, and each day Faolán’s concern for Svea, his big love, grows. Driven by this concern, he develops a dangerous plan to escape. Around the same time noble Sir Brandolf is looking for the lost ruler’s son Rogar, whose murdered farther he once swore the oath to take care of the boy. But the murderer from back then leaves nothing undone to prevent this. One day the noble sir meets two savaged pilgrims, whose identities raise questions.
An attack by bandits in the middle of the night leaves a young boy with no memory of who he is or where he is from. Nursed back to health by the devoted monks in a Benedictine abbey, he takes the name Alexander, or Xan for short. Aided by the kindly Brother Andrew, Xan commits himself to finding out who he really is. Does he have a family? Are they still alive? And who—or what—is the shadowy figure creeping around the abbey in the dead of night? Embark on an adventure while reading Shadow in the Dark as young Alexander tries to recover his memory and, with his new friends, uncover the mystery of the shadowy figure in the dark.
1980 President Carter’s chances of reelection are destroyed by the failure of the mission to rescue the hostages held in Iran. In the aftermath, the Iranians claimed to have discovered nine US bodies at the desert location where the mission disintegrated into panic and explosion, while the US authorities stated that only eight men were missing. Years later, an English monk – once an intelligence officer in Northern Ireland, whose life was torn apart by a disastrous undercover operation that led to his parents’ murder receives a US tycoon’s deathbed confession that he was part of a sinister and successful conspiracy to sabotage the rescue. The monk is then dragged back into a world of threats and violence, with the original conspirators bent on keeping the plot and its murderous legacy buried by any means necessary.Who organised the greatest political coup of the 20th century, and what is the identity of that ninth man found dead in the Iranian desert? The Carter Conspiracy weaves a web of ingenious and utterly believable fiction around true historical facts
THE FOREST OF THE FOUR WINDS Jon Bécquer is an anthropologist whose job is to locate and uncover lost historical objects. In an old monastery in Ourense he begins to investigate the curious disappearance of centuries-old relics which are part of The Legend of Nine Rings. So, when the corpse of a man in a Benedictine habit worn two centuries before unexpectedly appears, Bécquer and sergeant Xocas will venture deep into the legendary forests of Galicia in search of an explanation. As they move back in time, they will come across a singular story of doctor Vallejo and his daughter Marina, who, at the beginning of the 19th century travelled from Valladolid to the former Principality of Galicia to dedicate themselves to monastic life. There they will witness the fall of the Church after centuries in power and the final demise of the Anciene Régime, brought about by political upheaval and the Enlightenment. Interested in medicine and botany but not allowed to study, Marina will break the rules of knowledge, love and liberty that will change forever the course of life of the future generations.
The Benedictine Beda Mayr,OSB, (1742–1794) was one of the main figures of the German Catholic Enlightenment. He was not only the first Catholic to wrestle with the challenges of Reimarus and Lessing, but also the first to develop an ecumenical methodology for a reunion of the churches. The text, translated from the German original for the first time, presents a theologian who intentionally went to the margins of orthodoxy in order to allow for more interconfessional dialogue. Mayr argued that Catholic theology should follow minority opinions for unsettled dogmatic questions, which would allow for easier union agreements with Protestant churches. Moreover, he suggested limiting ecclesial infallibility to directly revealed truths, thereby reducing the authoritative truth claims of conciliar or papal decisions. Although the study of Catholic Enlightenment is booming among historians and theologians, too few texts are available in reliable translations. A major strength of this edition is not only that its introduction introduces the reader to the colorful landscape of eighteenth-century theological discussions, but also presents the entire text of Mayr's book (with the exception of its appendix) thereby allowing the reader to see the strengths and weaknesses of Enlightenment ecumenism. Mayr's Limited Infallibility was put on the Index of Forbidden Books, on which it remained until the 20th Century. It invites readers to a modern, non-scholastic way of theologizing for the sake of Christian unity.
Since the early 1970's the name Findhorn has been synonymous with the unfoldment and exponential growth of the new age movement the inner search for spiritual fulfilment and higher consciousness and the tender beginnings of environmental awareness. From the magical early stories of nature spirits and overlighting Devas to the formation of an accredited College and the founding of numerous socially responsible green businesses Findhorn remains today as solidly as ever at the core of creative learning integrated spirituality and innovative solutions to the challenges of community living. Hundreds of thousands of people have been touched by Findhorn over four decades and each individual has their own story and their own perception of what Findhorn is. Forty years of evolution growth and change have resulted in such a complex and varied community that it almost defies description. Karin Bogliolo lived in the Findhorn Community for 25 years and recently returned after an absence of several years. IN SEARCH OF THE MAGIC OF FINDHORN is Karin's quest to re-discover the magic of Findhorn as it is today. Her adventure requires persistence with an open mind and open heart until she eventually finds the elusive magical factor X that is unique to the community. Her journey takes her into some strange and unusual places and always into the wonderful diverse yet so very human people she finds there--a rock star a prison social worker a family building a straw-bale house a former Benedictine monk who runs a pottery studio and community newcomers from the far corners of the world.
The east franc empire in the year 956: Once again there is peace in the empire of king Otto, after the Hungarian hordes were defeated successfully on the Lechfeld in the year before. But the calm is deceitful. The rulers, who stood united behind the king only a few months ago, are now eager to cement their power in the empire and expand their influence. People even plot cold/bloodedly against their own families! Because of his brother’s betrayal, the entire family of the ruler Farold is supposed to be killed. Only the seven year old son Rogar can escape the bloodbath. Traumatized and without any knowledge of his true identity he is taken in by a Benedictine order near Neustatt and from there on has the name Faolán. The abbot and the cellarer try to preserve the lad from the murderous fingers of the betrayer. The subterranean powers do not stay inactive either. The young knight Brandolf, who stayed loyal to his master Farold even after his death, wants to find Rogar and help him receive his lawful heritage. In order to do so, he and his father even go to the highest instance, king Otto himself, to publicly accuse Farold’s brother of betrayal. But the king has far/reaching plans for which he needs strong vassals… Without knowing anything of these things, Faolán meets a girl named Svea. On that day his life starts to change dramatically. His former worldview is unraveled when he becomes aware of his love for Svea. Faolán tries everything to see the girl again. Doing so, he makes one fatal mistake that makes it possible for his bailiffs to finally get rid of the true heir of the countship.
A tribute to the work and influence of this groundbreaking composer
Two Native American brothers serve as soldiers in World War I
Death at the Deanery - sudden and unnatural death. Someone should have seen it coming. For even before Stuart Latimer arrives as the new Dean of Malbury, shock waves are reverberating through the tightly-knit and insular Cathedral Close, with sweeping changes afoot. And the reality is even worse than the expectation. The Dean's naked ambition and ruthless behaviour alienate everyone in the Chapter: the gentle John Kingsley, vague Rupert Greenwood, pompous Philip Thetford and, especially, the strongly traditionalist Arthur Brydges-french. Financial jiggery-pokery, clandestine meetings, malicious gossip, and several people who witness more than they ought to, make for a potent mix. But who could foresee that the mistrust within the Cathedral Close would spill over into violence and death? Canon Kingsley's daughter Lucy draws in her lover David Middleton-Brown, against his better judgement, and together they probe the surprising secrets of a self-contained world where nothing is as it seems.
‘Funny, unique and powerful. A wise, sad, wonderfully written memoir.’ David Nicholls First published in 1966, this extraordinary memoir has collected a passionate band of devotees. Written with a poet’s precision, it is a funny, absorbing and brilliantly portrayed rite of passage – from school playing fields to war’s battlefields, holiday camps to writers’ hang-outs, Brighton to Paris, Korea to Oxford, Barcelona to Jakarta … Driving the narrator is a desire to recount the effect of a singular young woman; the love of her and the loss of her. A joyous and movingly wise evocation of youth, travel and love; those moments of maximum brilliance, at the edge of possibility.
Intimate and illuminating conversations with one of America’s foremost Native artists
A panoramic novel against a backdrop of violence and political turbulence in the eleventh century, Ivar, a Danish orphan is enslaved to the most successful and experienced soldier of the age. He eventually becomes one of the elite bodyguard of the Emperor of Turkey. Meanwhile his distant relative, Torkil, the grandson of an Anglo Norse thayne, advances his military career in the service of Harold Godwinson. History dictates that one day the two warriors, caught up in the maelstrom of treachery, carnage, greed, lust and loyalty, will meet. When they do, there are devastating results for one of them, his king and his country. The crown of England was the most contested in all Europe – on the death of Edward the Confessor, Harold Godwinsson took possession of it. In 1066 two other claimants to the throne, a Norwegian and a Norman tried to wrest it from him. This is the story of Ivar and Torkil and the three kings they served.