Life
Blannbekin was likely born in Plambach, Austria to a peasant family; due to her ''Life and Revelations'' being the only source of information from her directly, little is known with certainty. Her surname, which is also sometimes spelled Blanbakin, is a derivation of the name of this village (i.e., ''Plambachen''). At the age of seven or eight, Blannbekin began secretly giving her meals to the poor. By the age of ten or eleven, she began craving the sacramental bread. In around 1260, she joined the Third Order of Saint Francis in Vienna; for the rest of her life she refused to eat meat, claiming the body of Christ was enough meat for her. During services and prayers in her early teenage years, Blannbekin began to hear voices which explained spiritual mysteries. Like her more famous contemporary,Association with extremist religious consumption
At the age of seven or eight, Blannbekin began secretly giving her meals to the poor; she would continue performing acts of both charity and self-starvation throughout her life. By the age of ten or eleven, she began craving the sacramental bread. In around 1260, she joined the Third Order of Saint Francis in Vienna, and for the rest of her life she refused to eat meat, claiming the body of Christ was enough meat for her; this led to her joining the legacy of mystics who used food and consumption (or lack thereof) as a vehicle for the soul to express its desire for God, because food was "a central metaphor ndthe most direct way of encountering God." Caroline Bynum writes:…to eat Christ is to become Christ. The Christ one becomes, in the reception of communion and in the ''imitation'' of asceticism, is the bleeding and suffering Christ of the cross. The flesh of Jesus—both flesh as body and flesh as food—is at the very center of female piety. And this flesh is simultaneously pleasure and pain.Blannbekin also joined the ranks of spiritual women who often fasted for long periods to induce a "suffering" as an offering to Christ.
Association with mystic eroticism
Although not all of her revelations were considered obscene, they included visions of monks, women, and Jesus naked, and described pseudo-sexual ecstasy at receiving them. In one vision, she claimed to have felt the foreskin of Jesus in her mouth:Crying and with compassion, she began to think about the foreskin of Christ, where it may be located fter the Resurrection And behold, soon she felt with the greatest sweetness on her tongue a little piece of skin alike the skin in an egg, which she swallowed. After she had swallowed it, she again felt the little skin on her tongue with sweetness as before, and again she swallowed it. And this happened to her about a hundred times. And when she felt it so frequently, she was tempted to touch it with her finger. And when she wanted to do so, that little skin went down her throat on its own. And it was told to her that the foreskin was resurrected with the Lord on the day of resurrection. And so great was the sweetness of tasting that little skin that she felt in all erlimbs and parts of the limbs a sweet transformation.Blannbekin described herself as continually beset with visions throughout the day, which she described as ''imber lacrimarum'', or a "rain of tears" from God. Many of these visions involved bright lights, and in one she described being "so filled with light within that she could gaze at herself." As with the foreskin occasion, many of her visions involved touch, such as being kissed on the cheeks by the
Criticism and support
Modern scholars are splintered over the themes and messages of Blannbekin. Most accounts take a gynocentric viewpoint, e.g. analyzing the erotic images of Christ in terms of feminist criticism; this presents a patterned shift in her reception: as third-wave feminism of the early 1990s reintroduced sex-positivity and Blannbekin's Life and Revelations came back into the medievalist spotlight, her work garnered a remarkable amount of support. Before this, eroticism intermingled with Christian revelations were treated disdainfully. Additionally, modern critics are increasingly more concerned with explicating the prejudice (albeit standard) in her work:Medieval women, like medieval men, had the choice to support or subvert Christianity's efforts to marginalize and persecute groups such as homosexuals, lepers, Jews, and people of color. Thus, we find Agnes repeating the widely known legend about the death of sodomites at the birth of Christ. She repeatedly condemns Jews, presents a negative portrayal of Ethiopians and associates dark skin with evil, and interprets leprosy as a sign of moral corruption. When read from the perspective of any of these marginalized groups, Agnes's religious beliefs are put into sharp relief as an example of Christian hegemonic strategies, often successful, to employ its subaltern members to its own ends.While this is a mar on the universality of Blannbekin's work, it is still an opportunity for scholars of women's spirituality to peer into the life of an "odd" beguine who emblemizes common topics of interest in Medieval mysticism.
Death
Blannbekin died in Vienna on 10 March, 1315, in her convent.References
Further reading
* Critical edition of her ''Vita et Revelationes'' and German translation: Peter Dinzelbacher and Renate Vogeler, ''Leben und Offenbarungen der Wiener Begine Agnes Blannbekin'', Goppingen 1994. {{DEFAULTSORT:Blannbekin, Agnes 1240s births 1315 deaths Austrian saints 13th-century Austrian people 13th-century Austrian women 13th-century Christian mystics 14th-century Austrian people 14th-century Austrian women 14th-century Christian mystics 14th-century Christian saints Austrian women writers Christian female saints of the Middle Ages Medieval Austrian saints Members of the Third Order of Saint Francis Roman Catholic mystics