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Product Description Renowned Franciscan scholar Paul Sabatier called it "the most important work that has been made on the life of Saint Francis." The Book of the Conformity (often called The Conformities) represents the highest point of medieval glorification of the figure of St. Francis. It contains a nearly complete record of the saint's own writings, and a vast store of material from all the known hagiographical legends of the saint from the 13th through late 14th centuries. In addition, it has extensive lists of the places where Franciscan friars, Poor Clare nuns and Franciscan tertiaries lived and ministered, with personal details about many Franciscan personages, both famous and obscure. The author, Bartholomew of Pisa, divided his large work into what he calls 3 "Books". Part 1 concerns the Incarnation, the Nativity and the early life of Jesus, with corresponding similarities to be found in the early years of Francis's life. Part 2 concerns the years of the public ministry of Jesus, his preaching and healing, calling of disciples, travels from one place to another, with similar events in the life of Francis. Part 3 concerns the Passion, Death, Resurrection and Ascension/Glorification of Christ, and the events of Francis's last days, his illnesses and suffering, his receiving of the stigmata, his death, canonization, and the miracles attributed to him as a heavenly intercessor. Review The late fourteenth-century Liber Conformitatum of Bartholomew of Pisa, a vast and ingenious exegetical essay in which the parallels between the actual and legendary lives of Francis and the gospel and legendary lives of Jesus are laid out and developed at great length, is the most extensive Franciscan literary monument to the idea of Francis as alter Christus. Though controversial even in its own day, it is a gold mine of ideas and images for students of medieval Franciscan theology, literature, and the visual arts, among whom this English language edition will find a warm welcome. -- John V. Fleming, Princeton University Never translated into a modern language, this enormous work has been under-exploited. The first English translation by Christopher Stace, edited by William Short, will allow us to discover the richness of this monument which restores the universal and local dimensions of the Order of Friars Minor. -- Jacques Dalarun This late medieval work of Bartholomew of Pisa is an extended meditation on the conformity of the life of Francis with the life of Jesus Christ. It is a tapestry of medieval hermeneutics and Franciscan sources highlighting the rich theme of conformitas. This welcome addition to the already published volumes is highly to be praised. -- Lawrence S. Cunningham, The University of Notre Dame About the Author The author of more than thirty works, Bartholomew of Pisa (Bartholomew Rinonico) is known to history as the author of Conformity. This three volume work, completed in 1399, was vital to the Christian communities that had been touched by the life of St. Francis and it represents the highest point of Medieval glorification of the figure of St. Francis. Many Reformers were highly critical of it and it is therefore an important text for scholars of the Reformation as well as the Medieval period.