FLAGELLANT - significado y definición. Qué es FLAGELLANT
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Qué (quién) es FLAGELLANT - definición

PRACTITIONERS OF AN EXTREME FORM OF SELF-MORTIFICATION
Flagellants; Flagellant movement; Flagellantism; Flaggelant; Laudesi; Flagellant confraternity
  • God]], as they repent.
  • discipline]] (2010).
  • Flagellants in the [[Kingdom of Hungary]] in 1263 ([[Chronicon Pictum]], 1358)
  • ''The flagellants'' by [[Pieter van Laer]]
  • Woodcut of flagellants ([[Nuremberg Chronicle]], 1493)

Flagellant         
·noun One of a fanatical sect which flourished in Europe in the 13th and 14th centuries, and maintained that flagellation was of equal virtue with baptism and the sacrament;
- called also disciplinant.
flagellant         
['flad?(?)l(?)nt, fl?'d??l(?)nt]
¦ noun a person who subjects themselves to flagellation.
Flagellant         
Flagellants are practitioners of a form of mortification of the flesh by whipping their skin with various instruments of penance. Many Christian confraternities of penitents have flagellants, who beat themselves, both in the privacy of their dwellings and in public processions, in order to repent of sins and share in the Passion of Jesus.

Wikipedia

Flagellant

Flagellants are practitioners of a form of mortification of the flesh by whipping their skin with various instruments of penance. Many Christian confraternities of penitents have flagellants, who beat themselves, both in the privacy of their dwellings and in public processions, in order to repent of sins and share in the Passion of Jesus.

In the 14th century, a movement within Western Christianity known as Flagellantism became popular and adherents "began beating their flesh in a public penitential ritual in response to war, famine, plague and fear engendered by millenarianism." Though this movement withered away, the practices of public repentance and promoting peace were adopted by the flagellants in Christian, especially Roman Catholic, confraternities of penitents that exist to the present-day.

Ejemplos de uso de FLAGELLANT
1. The modern jogger is perhaps a secular equivalent of the medieval flagellant beating his path to Canterbury.