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Description
| - The travel writing of Angelikus M. Müller entitled Peregrinus in Jerusalem is considered to be the longest pre-modern pilgrimage travel account with the provenance from the lands of the Bohemian Crown. This account of a pilgrimage to the eastern Mediterranean was written in Prague by a friar of the Order of the Servants of Mary, the so-called Servites. For a long time hardly any scholarly attention has been paid to this five-volume opus which describes his journey from the Italian port of Livorno to Palestine, Constantinople, Egypt, Syria and back to Rome undertaken in the years 1725 to 1727. The lack of scholarly interest may have been conditioned by the fact that it was written in German and very little was previously known about the author. The article uses previously neglected sources of Servite provenance and analyzes the travelogue as the means of Müller’s self-representation and representations of religious virtuosi from other cultures (drawing on the concept of “religious virtuosity” as coined by the German sociologist Max Weber).
- The travel writing of Angelikus M. Müller entitled Peregrinus in Jerusalem is considered to be the longest pre-modern pilgrimage travel account with the provenance from the lands of the Bohemian Crown. This account of a pilgrimage to the eastern Mediterranean was written in Prague by a friar of the Order of the Servants of Mary, the so-called Servites. For a long time hardly any scholarly attention has been paid to this five-volume opus which describes his journey from the Italian port of Livorno to Palestine, Constantinople, Egypt, Syria and back to Rome undertaken in the years 1725 to 1727. The lack of scholarly interest may have been conditioned by the fact that it was written in German and very little was previously known about the author. The article uses previously neglected sources of Servite provenance and analyzes the travelogue as the means of Müller’s self-representation and representations of religious virtuosi from other cultures (drawing on the concept of “religious virtuosity” as coined by the German sociologist Max Weber). (en)
- The travel writing of Angelikus M. Müller entitled Peregrinus in Jerusalem is considered to be the longest pre-modern pilgrimage travel account with the provenance from the lands of the Bohemian Crown. This account of a pilgrimage to the eastern Mediterranean was written in Prague by a friar of the Order of the Servants of Mary, the so-called Servites. For a long time hardly any scholarly attention has been paid to this five-volume opus which describes his journey from the Italian port of Livorno to Palestine, Constantinople, Egypt, Syria and back to Rome undertaken in the years 1725 to 1727. The lack of scholarly interest may have been conditioned by the fact that it was written in German and very little was previously known about the author. The article uses previously neglected sources of Servite provenance and analyzes the travelogue as the means of Müller’s self-representation and representations of religious virtuosi from other cultures (drawing on the concept of “religious virtuosity” as coined by the German sociologist Max Weber). (cs)
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Title
| - Mendicant Friar in contact with “Other” Religious Virtuosi: the Travel Writing of the Servite Angelikus Maria Müller (1677–1734)
- Mendicant Friar in contact with “Other” Religious Virtuosi: the Travel Writing of the Servite Angelikus Maria Müller (1677–1734) (en)
- Mendicant Friar in contact with “Other” Religious Virtuosi: the Travel Writing of the Servite Angelikus Maria Müller (1677–1734) (cs)
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skos:prefLabel
| - Mendicant Friar in contact with “Other” Religious Virtuosi: the Travel Writing of the Servite Angelikus Maria Müller (1677–1734)
- Mendicant Friar in contact with “Other” Religious Virtuosi: the Travel Writing of the Servite Angelikus Maria Müller (1677–1734) (en)
- Mendicant Friar in contact with “Other” Religious Virtuosi: the Travel Writing of the Servite Angelikus Maria Müller (1677–1734) (cs)
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skos:notation
| - RIV/47813059:19240/12:#0004615!RIV14-GA0-19240___
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http://linked.open...avai/riv/aktivita
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http://linked.open...avai/riv/aktivity
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http://linked.open...vai/riv/dodaniDat
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http://linked.open...aciTvurceVysledku
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http://linked.open.../riv/druhVysledku
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http://linked.open...iv/duvernostUdaju
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http://linked.open...titaPredkladatele
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http://linked.open...dnocenehoVysledku
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http://linked.open...ai/riv/idVysledku
| - RIV/47813059:19240/12:#0004615
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http://linked.open...riv/jazykVysledku
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http://linked.open.../riv/klicovaSlova
| - early modern period; travelogue; Levant; pilgrimage; mendicant friars; religious virtuosi (en)
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http://linked.open.../riv/klicoveSlovo
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http://linked.open...ontrolniKodProRIV
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http://linked.open...v/mistoKonaniAkce
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http://linked.open...i/riv/mistoVydani
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http://linked.open...i/riv/nazevZdroje
| - Samotrzeć, w kompanii czy z orszakiem? Spolezcne aspekty podróżowania w średniowieczu i w czasach nowożytnych
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http://linked.open...in/vavai/riv/obor
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http://linked.open...ichTvurcuVysledku
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http://linked.open...cetTvurcuVysledku
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http://linked.open...vavai/riv/projekt
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http://linked.open...UplatneniVysledku
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http://linked.open...iv/tvurceVysledku
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http://linked.open...vavai/riv/typAkce
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http://linked.open.../riv/zahajeniAkce
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number of pages
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http://purl.org/ne...btex#hasPublisher
| - Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii PAN
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https://schema.org/isbn
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http://localhost/t...ganizacniJednotka
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