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Dissimulation and Deceit in Early Modern EuropeDissimulation and Deceit in Early Modern Europe

Dissimulation and Deceit in Early Modern Europe

Tamar Herzig, Miriam Eliav-Feldon

About this book

"A Luso-Malay cosmographer who claimed to have discovered Ophir, a Franciscan friar who headed a delegation of shabby fraudulent emissaries from the Orient, a Dominican tertiary's confirmed stigmata eventually revealed as fraud but later venerated again as saintly, a Jewish convert who was suspected of both demonic possession and of feigned sanctity, poor folk who survived by converting time and again in order to enjoy the benefits accorded to neophytes, religious chameleons who adapted themselves to the surroundings in which they found themselves, and a number of possessed girls--these are some of the figures re-enacting their charade in the pages of this volume. Twelve distinguished scholars analyse categories and individual cases of imposture in the age of geographical discoveries, of debates over the category of sanctity, and of forced conversions, thus offering a more nuanced understanding of the meaning of identity and pretence, truth and falsehood, in early modern Europe"--

Details

OL Work ID
OL20733379W

Subjects

FraudDeceptionSocial HistoryTruthfulness and falsehoodReligious life and customsBedrägeriSociala aspekterLögnManners and customsHISTORYSocial life and customsSocial aspectsRELIGIONImpostors and impostureGeneralHistoriaCongressesBedragare

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