Pechmann, M. Gonzaga Fr. von, Geschichte des Englischen Institutes Beatae Mariae Virginis in Bayern
Selbstverl. des General-Mutterhauses 1907
549 S.
Pechmann, Gonzaga von, Geschichte des Englischen Institutes Beatae Mariae Virginis in Bayern. Nach Quellen bearbeitet von M. Gonzaga Fr. von Pechmann, I.B.M.V.
Im Selbstverl. des General-Mutterhauses München-Nymphenburg 1907
543 S.
Parker, Pauline, The spirit of Mary Ward. Her character and spirituality. Religious perfection according to Mary Ward
Cook & Son 1963
93 S.
Parker, Pauline, The spirit of Mary Ward. Her character and spirituality religious perfection according to Mary Ward
Vatican Polyglot Press 1945
105 S.
Achtung: Bindung gelöst!
Parker, Pauline, Teaching as a vocation
1st publ.
Burns Oates 1953
144 S.
Klappentext:
This handbook for catholic teachers by a religious of the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary contains very much that is good, and even new, difficult as that is, and will be found useful by experienced teachers as well as by the student teachers in catholic training colleges for whom it is primarily intended. (...)
Paradies der Christlichen Seele. Vollständiges Gebet- und Andachtsbuch
Jos. Thum 1887
432 S.
Ott, Georg, Christkatholisches Unterrichts- und Erbauungsbuch oder kurze Auslegung aller sonn- und festtäglichen Episteln und Evangelien sammt daraus gezogenen Glaubens- und Sittenlehren, nebst einer deutlichen Erklärung der vorzüglichsten Kirchen-Gebräuche, einer Haus-Meß-Andacht, sowie den Lebensbeschreibungen vieler, dem christkatholischen Volke liebwerther Heiligen und einer Beschreibung des heiligen Landes
Pustet 1869
684 S.
Beil:
Brief der Anna K. Mayrhoifer aus München an das Institut (sie hat das Buch bei der Sortierung eines Nachlasses gefunden), Pfingsten 1968.
Österreichische Provinz IBMV (Hrsg.), Maria Ward. Gründerin des Institutes Beatae Mariae Virginis
Österreichische Provinz IBMV [1980]
74 S.
Lebensgeschichte der Maria Ward anhand von Zitaten
Orchard, Emmanuel, Mary Ward: Once and future foundress
first ed.
The Incorporated Catholic Truth Society 1985
16 S.
Klappentext:
In the early years of the seventeenth century a young Yorkshire woman, Mary Ward, began a new form of religious life for women: free of enclosure, free to open schools and work amongst the poor, free to move wherever the need was greatest, free to pray whenever oppurtunity allowed, free from government by a male Order. But the fledgling community was condemned and Mary herself briefly imprisoned; it was many years after her death before the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary was confirmed by the Church and only in 1909 that she was officially declared its foundress.
This is the story of her life.
Orchard, Emmanuel (Hrsg.), Till God will. Mary Ward through her writings [Foreword by Mother Teresa of Calcutta]
- Aufl.
Darton, Longman and Todd 1985
126 S.
Klappentext:
Mary Ward was a pioneer of active, unenclosed religious life for women and a firm believer in the rights of women in the seventeenth century. In Till God Will she tells her own story and Emmanuel Orchard IBVM has drawn substantially on Mary Ward’s autobiographical writings and letters to give a living portrait of this dynamic woman and of the foundation of the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Mary Ward’s life was marked by suffering, persecution and set-backs from within and without her own church. Religious life without formal monastic enclosure was seen as revolutionary and members of the newly founded institute were known to their detractors as "Galloping Girls".
Mother Teresa of Calcutta is one of Mary Ward’s best known and most faithful daughters as she spent the first twenty years of her religious life in the Loreto Branch of the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Mother Teresa’s enthusiastic advocacy of Mary Ward in the foreword to the book emphasises that this "woman for all seasons" is truly a bridge between formal religious life which Mother Teresa can be seen to represent and today’s feminist movement within the churches.