Franciscan Poverty and Monastic Economy: Daily practices of friars and nuns in Santiago de Chile (1790-1820)

De La Taille-Trétinville A.

Abstract

This article deals with the daily practices of friars and nuns in Santiago, Chile, during the transition from the 18th to the 19th century. Specifically, it compares the observance of the vow of poverty according to the spirituality of the saints of Assisi: Saint Francis and Saint Clare. Through the compilation, analysis and interpretation of conventual sources, we can establish that it was precisely the rule itself and its mitigation that allowed the << excesses >> that separated the sisters from the founder's ideal, whereas the legislative texts for the Friars Minor meant that they did not undergo significant changes in this aspect. Other factors were the impossibility of going into the world to obtain alms, and the consequent requirement of a dowry.

Más información

Título según WOS: Franciscan Poverty and Monastic Economy: Daily practices of friars and nuns in Santiago de Chile (1790-1820)
Título según SCOPUS: Franciscan Poverty and Monastic Economy: Daily practices of friars and nuns in Santiago de Chile (1790-1820) [Pobreza franciscana y economía monástica: Prácticas cotidianas de frailes y monjas en Santiago de Chile (1790-1820)]
Título de la Revista: ANUARIO DE HISTORIA DE LA IGLESIA
Volumen: 28
Editorial: UNIV NAVARRA, SERVICIO PUBLICACIONES
Fecha de publicación: 2019
Página de inicio: 319
Página final: 341
Idioma: Spanish
DOI:

10.15581/007.28.319-341

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS