As Sweet as Honey: Honey, Bees and Chastity in the Early Medieval Period

Hiu Ki Chan

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract

Honey and bees have been a long-standing metaphor in western civilisation, having a history as a didactic metaphor employed by various writers across the centuries. This paper aims to delineate the changing interpretations of honey and bees in the early medieval period with a focus on how they were attached to chastity. It argues that the metaphor was gradually re-developed and re-interpreted from the early church to the early medieval period, it also pinpoints the evolution to a more specific usage of the metaphor within the contexts of monasticism. It first explores how honey and bees were connected to chastity in the writings of various church fathers, then it surveys how the connection continued in the works of several monastic writers.
Original languageEnglish
Publication statusPublished - 24 Oct 2020
Event14th International Conference of the Taiwan Association of Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance Studies - National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan
Duration: 23 Oct 202024 Oct 2020
https://2020tacmrs.wordpress.com/

Conference

Conference14th International Conference of the Taiwan Association of Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance Studies
Abbreviated titleTACMRS
Country/TerritoryTaiwan
CityTaipei
Period23/10/2024/10/20
Internet address

Keywords

  • bees
  • Chastity
  • honey
  • Early medieval
  • Metaphor
  • monastic history

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