The volume examines through a series of case studies the way in which saints' cults operated across and beyond political ethnic and linguistic boundaries in the medieval British Isles and Ireland from the 6th to the 16th centuries. The papers highlight the factors that allowed particular cults to prosper in or that made them relevant to a variety of cultural contexts. The collection has a particular emphasis on northern Britain and the role of devotional interests in connecting or shaping a number of polities and cultural identities [Pictish Scottish Northumbrian Irish Welsh and English] in a world of fluid political and territorial boundaries. Although the bulk of the studies are concerned with the significance of cults in the insular context many of the articles also touch on the development of pan-European devotions [such as the cults of St Brendan The Three Kings or St George].
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