Clare Stancliffe
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Clare Stancliffe is a historian and Medievalist. She teaches in Ecclesiastical History in the Departments of History and of Theology & Religion at Durham University.[1] She is known for developing the idea of The colors of martyrdom,[2] in early Irish Christianity.
She is author of numerous books including:
- Clare Stancliffe, "Red, White and Blue Martyrdom," in Ireland in Early Mediaeval Europe. Studies in memory of Kathleen Hughes (Cambridge University Press, 1982),
- Clare Stancliffe, "Cuthbert and the Polarity between Pastor and Solitary", in Bonner, Gerald; , Rollason, David; Stancliffe, Clare, St Cuthbert, His Cult and His Community to AD 1200, (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 1989), pp. 21–44,
- Clare Stancliffe, "Oswald: Most Holy and Most Victorious King of the Northumbrians" in Clare Stancliffe & Eric Cambridge (eds) Oswald: Northumbrian King to European Saint. Paul Watkins, (Stamford, 1995).
- Clare Stancliffe, "Where Was Oswald Killed?", in C. Stancliffe and E. Cambridge (ed.), Oswald: Northumbrian King to European Saint (1995, 1996).
- Clare Stancliffe, "St Martin and his hagiographer: History and miracle in Sulpicius Severus" (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1983),
- Clare Stancliffe, Bede, Wilfrid, and the Irish. Jarrow Lecture 46 (2003). Jarrow, UK: St Paul's Church Jarrow.
- Clare Stancliffe, "Patrick (fl. 5th cent.), patron saint of Ireland"(2004), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography,
- Clare Stancliffe, The Miracle Stories in Seventh-century Irish Saints' Lives (1992)
References
- ↑ Dr Clare Stancliffe at Durham University.
- ↑ Clare Stancliffe, "Red, White and Blue Martyrdom," in Ireland in Early Mediaeval Europe. Studies in memory of Kathleen Hughes (Cambridge University Press, 1982), passim, especially pp. 29, 35 and 41.