flagellant

listen to the pronunciation of flagellant
İngilizce - İngilizce
A member of a religious order that preaches self-mortification as a means of absolution
One who practices flagellating oneself, either for penance
{s} whipping; harshly critical
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
a person who whips himself as a religious penance
a person who whips himself as a religious penance a person who is whipped or whips himself for sexual gratification
someone who whips themselves, especially as a religious punishment
a person who is whipped or whips himself for sexual gratification
{i} one who whips himself as part of a religious rite; one who whips himself or others
A flagellant
disciplinant
flagellants
Medieval religious sects that included public beatings with whips as part of their discipline and devotional practice. Flagellant sects arose in northern Italy, and had become large and widespread by 1260. Groups marched through European towns, whipping each other to atone for their sins and calling on the populace to repent. They gained many new members in the mid-14th century while the Black Death was ravaging Europe. Though periodically suppressed by the authorities, flagellant sects enjoyed sporadic resurgences into the 16th century
flagellants
plural of flagellant
flagellant

    Heceleme

    flag·el·lant

    Telaffuz

    Etimoloji

    [ 'fla-j&-l&nt, fl&- ] (noun.) circa 1587. From the Latin flagellare meaning to whip