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  1. 11 de dic. de 2018 · Hildegard’s complementarity affirms difference as a balanced, integrated harmony. Hildegard’s incarnational vision of complementarity remained underdeveloped, however, as Western thought veered toward Aristotelian polarity in the thirteenth century, and then toward Cartesian dualism in the seventeenth century, wherein human identity was abstracted away from embodiment entirely.

  2. 1136. Hildegard of Bingen becomes Abbess of Disibodenberg. c. 1142 - 1151. Hildegard of Bingen 's first major theological work Scivias composed. 1150. Hildegard of Bingen founds convent at Rupertsberg and moves her order there. 1150 - 1158. Hildegard of Bingen writes her Liber Subtilatum, a work on medicine and holistic health. 1151.

  3. Su pensamiento abarcó desde la música y la medicina hasta la cosmología y la ética, dejando un legado intelectual que trasciende los límites de su tiempo. 1. Una visión holística del universo. Una de las teorías más destacadas de Hildegarda de Bingen es su concepción holística del universo.

  4. 16 de feb. de 2020 · Hildegard died in 1179, at the age of 81. Soon after, she was venerated locally as a saint. Hildegard is reputed to have performed miracles during her lifetime and they are said to have continued at her tomb after the saint’s death. Nevertheless, she was not officially canonized by the Catholic Church until much later.

  5. 26 de jun. de 2014 · Hildegard of Bingen. Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the medieval mystic, composer and writer Hildegard of Bingen. Show more. Download. Available now. 45 minutes. Thu 26 Jun 2014 21:30. Miri ...

  6. Hildegard of Bingen was one of the most remarkable women of the Middle Ages--an Abbess and woman of God, a visionary, naturalist, playwright, political moralist, and composer. Born in 1098, she ...

  7. Elisabeth, a young nun at the monastery of Sch6nau near Bingen, modelled herself from an early age on the seer across the Rhine. In 1152-five years after the Council of Trier, where Hildegard was vindicated by Pope Eugenius III, and one year after the Scivias was published-the younger nun's mystical visitations began.