Eadmer

 Eanbald

 Eanbald I

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 Easter

 Easter Controversy

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 Adam Easton

 St. Eata

 Ebbo

 Thomas Ebendorfer

 Matthias Eberhard

 Eberhard of Ratisbon

 Ebionites

 Ebner

 Ecclesiastes

 Ecclesiastical Art

 Ecclesiasticus

 Samuel Eccleston

 Thomas of Eccleston

 Jacques Echard

 Baltasar de Echave

 Echinus

 Abbey of Echternach

 Julius Echter von Mespelbrunn

 Johann Eck

 Anselm Eckart

 Eckebert

 Johann Georg von Eckhart

 Johann, Meister Eckhart

 Joseph Hilarius Eckhel

 Eclecticism

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 Ecuador

 Edda

 Edelinck

 Edesius and Frumentius

 Edessa

 Henry Essex Edgeworth

 Edinburgh

 Editions of the Bible

 Congregation of Saint Edmund

 Ven. Edmund Arrowsmith

 Bl. Edmund Campion

 St. Edmund Rich

 St. Edmund the Martyr

 Education

 Catholic Educational Association

 Education of the Blind

 Education of the Deaf and Dumb

 Edward III

 St. Edward the Confessor

 St. Edward the Martyr

 St. Edwin

 Edwy

 Boetius Egan

 Michael Egan

 St. Egbert

 Egbert

 Egbert, Archbishop of Trier

 Egbert, Archbishop of York

 Egfrid

 Frederick W. von Egloffstein

 Lamoral, Count of Egmont, Prince of Gâvre

 Egoism

 St. Egwin

 Egypt

 Egyptian Church Ordinance

 Josef Karl Benedikt, Freiherr von Eichendorff

 Diocese of Eichstätt

 St. Eimhin

 Einhard

 Abbey of Einsiedeln

 Martin Eisengrein

 St. Eithene

 St. Eithne

 Ekkehard

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 George Elder

 William Henry Elder

 Eleazar

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 Fausto de Elhuyar y de Suvisa

 Elias

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 St. Elizabeth of Schönau

 Philip Michael Ellis

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 Ezzo

St. Elizabeth of Schönau

Elizabeth of Schönau, Saint, b. about 1129; d. June 18, 1165. Feast June 18. She was born of an obscure family, entered the double-monastery of Schönau in Nassau at the age of twelve, received the Benedictine habit, made her profession in 1147, and in 1157 was made superioress of the nuns under the Abbot Hildelin. After her death she was buried in the abbey church of St. Florin. When her writings were published the name of saint was added. She was never formally canonized, but in 1584 her name was entered in the Roman Martyrology and has remained there.

Given to works of piety from her youth, much afflicted with bodily and mental suffering, a zealous observer of the Rule of St. Benedict and of the regulations of her convent, and devoted to practices of mortification, Elizabeth was favored, from 1152, with ecstasies and visions of various kinds. These generally occurred on Sundays and Holy Days at Mass or Divine Office or after hearing or reading the lives of saints. Christ, His Blessed Mother, an angel, or the special saint of the day would appear to her and instruct her; or she would see quite realistic representations of the Passion, Resurrection, and Ascension, or other scenes of the Old and New Testaments. What she saw and heard she put down on wax tablets. Her abbot, Hildelin, told her to relate these things to her brother Egbert (Eckebert), then priest at the church of Bonn. At first she hesitated, fearing lest she be deceived or be looked upon as a deceiver; but she obeyed. Egbert received the tablets and Elizabeth supplemented what she had written by oral explanations. Egbert (who became a monk of Schönau in 1155 and succeeded Hildelin as second abbot) put everything in writing, later arranged the material at leisure, and then published all under his sister's name.

Thus came into existence (I) three books of "Visions". Of these the first is written in language very simple and in unaffected style, so that it may easily pass as the work of Elizabeth. The other two are more elaborate and replete with theological terminology, so that they show more of the work of Egbert than of Elizabeth. (2) "Liber viarum Dei". This seems to be an imitation of the "Scivias" (scire vias Domini) of St. Hildegarde of Bingen, her friend and correspondent. It contains admonitions to all classes of society, to the clergy and laity, to the married and unmarried. Here the influence of Egbert is very plain. She utters prophetic threats of judgment against priests who are unfaithful shepherds of the flock of Christ, against the avarice and wordliness of the monks who only wear the garb of poverty and self-denial, against the vices of the laity, and against bishops and superiors delinquent in their duty; she urges all to combat earnestly the heresy of the Cathari; she declares Victor IV, the antipope supported by Frederick against Alexander III, as the one chosen of God. All of this appears in Egbert's own writings. (3) The revelation on the martyrdom of St. Ursula and her companions. This is full of fantastic exaggerations and anachronisms, but has become the foundation of the subsequent Ursula legends. There is a great diversity of opinion in regard to her revelations. The Church has never passed sentence upon them nor even examined them. Elizabeth herself was convinced of their supernatural character, as she states in a letter to Hildegarde; her brother held the same opinion; Trithemius considers them genuine; Eusebius Amort (De revelationibus visionibus et apparitionibus privatis regulae tutae, etc., Augsburg, 1744) holds them to be nothing more than what Elizabeth's own imagination could produce, or illusions of the devil, since in some things they disagree with history and with other revelations (Acta SS., October, IX, 81). A complete edition of her writings was made by F. W. E. Roth (Brünn, 1884); translations appeared in Italian (Venice, 1859), French (Tournai, 1864), and in Icelandic (1226-1254).

FRANCIS MERSHMAN