Timothy Luke Glover
Position
Researcher, Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow
Affiliation
Short info
Publications
Monographs and Editions
- Richard Rolle's Art of Synthesis: Compilation, Form, and Authorship (monograph, in negotiation)
- Richard Rolle's Emendatio vitae and Other Works (critical edition, under advance contract with PIMS)
Peer-Reviewed Articles
- ‘The Original Text, Recipient, and Manuscript Presentation of Richard Rolle’s Emendatio vitae [The Amending of Life]’, Mediaeval Studies 85 (2025 for 2023), 163–238.
- ‘“Strange in His Ways, Strange in His Words”: Eccentricity, Eremitism, and Autobiography in the Writings of Richard Rolle’, Speculum 99.4 (2024), 1052–65. DOI:10.1086/731947
- ‘Late-Medieval Commonplace Culture, the Pastoral Compendium, and the Form of Richard Rolle’s The Form of Living’, Review of English Studies 75, issue 319 (2024), 165–83. DOI:10.1093/res/hgae007
- ‘Richard Rolle’s Commentary on the Lord’s Prayer: Composition, Text, Reception’, The Journal of Medieval Latin 34 (2024), 189–251. DOI:10.1484/J.JML.5.136332
- ‘Singing from Manuscripts? Fifteenth-Century, English, Secular Songs with Music and their Reading Practices’, Postgraduate English: A Journal and Forum for Postgraduates in English 33 (2016), 1–30.
Peer-Reviewed Book Chapters
- ‘Richard Rolle and the Heresy of the Free Spirit’, Medieval Mystical Tradition in England IX, ed. E.A. Jones (Woodbridge, 2025), pp. 16–33 DOI:10.2307/jj.22679791.8
Projects
PopLatin: Priests’ Books and the Popularisation of the Contemplative Life in England, 1300–1550
(Marie Skłodowska-Curie Project funded by the European Research Council, 2025–2027)
PopLatin aims to write a new history of lay contemplative spirituality in the Middle Ages. Medieval people understood ‘contemplation’ as the highest religious experience: a revelation of divine love that could only occur, rarely, for those most committed to God. PopLatin offers a novel account of medieval contemplative spirituality by focusing on sources that scholars have largely overlooked: namely, the Latin textbooks that medieval priests used to teach their congregations. Latin priests’ books popularised famous medieval writers by transforming their teachings into more accessible forms, which priests then used to instruct their parishioners orally. The premise of PopLatin is that these neglected sources offer a new history of lay contemplative spirituality in the Middle Ages. By showing, counter-intuitively, that Latin was a language of popularisation through texts like these, PopLatin offers a radically revised view of what literature and beliefs ordinary laypeople could access during the centuries before the European Reformation.
These objectives will be achieved through: literary analysis of four case studies, to establish how these Latin texts popularised the contemplative teachings of medieval authorities; analysis of material evidence, to show how priests communicated the teachings in their books to laypeople; survey of Latin priests’ literature, assisted by AI, to contextualise my research in wider trends; and literary analysis of the influence of Latin priests’ books on writers more famous today, to establish their importance for cultural history.