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hagiography
(redirected from hagiographical)

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hagiography

The writing of the lives of saints. These are usually expressed in glowing terms and as such hagiography tends to mean somewhat biased and overornate writings, frequently leaving much to be desired as historical records of the saints.



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These programmes generally lurch between the hagiographical and the 'real-life' expose, but in each case the individual stands dominant but isolated; at times, wholly removed from his social context.
Weigel is still the person to go to for fact-checking, though less for interpretation, since there is a whiff of the hagiographical about it.
The climax of this early hagiographical tendency appeared in Vasari's biographies of 1550 and 1568, which provided such details as the image of the artist weeping as he painted a Crucifixion, and the pope's plan to appoint him archbishop of Florence.
 
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