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Christian History in Rural Germany: Transcending the Catholic and Protestant Narratives [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 464 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, weight: 930 g
  • Sērija : Studies in Central European Histories 72
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Nov-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Brill
  • ISBN-10: 900452648X
  • ISBN-13: 9789004526488
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 464 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, weight: 930 g
  • Sērija : Studies in Central European Histories 72
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Nov-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Brill
  • ISBN-10: 900452648X
  • ISBN-13: 9789004526488
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Surely, Christian history in Germany principally followed the outlines of a Catholic and Protestant narrative, right? On the contrary, for Hesse, Hanau, and Fulda this dominant framework largely obscures the historical experience of most Christians, specifically rural Christians. The rural Christian narrative, animated for more than a millennium by agricultural and communal forces, principally followed an indigenous path characterized by long-term surges and setbacks. This path eventually bifurcated not in the 1517-1648 period but rather in the wake of the 1648 Peace of Westphalia, and it did so not into Catholic and Protestant storylines but rather into those Christian corpora (Gemeinden) which maintained their local civil-sacred unity into the twentieth century and those which lost that unity after succumbing to Westphalia's divisive effects.
Acknowledgements xi
Note on the Translation xiv
List of Figures and Maps
xvi
Introduction 1(12)
PART 1 Surges: The Civil and the Sacred United
Introduction to Part 1
13(3)
1 The Animating Forces of Christian History in Rural Germany, to 1648
16(31)
2 Rural Gemeinden in an Age of Pluralization, 1517--1648
47(61)
1 Scales of Corpus Christianum, and How Each Fared in the Sixteenth Century
51(10)
2 The Christian Confessions and the Imperial Territories
61(14)
3 Rural Gemeinden Navigate through Pluralization
75(33)
3 Mounting Another Surge, 1648---1800s
108(33)
1 Betterment by Localizing
116(11)
2 Maintenance of Custom and Status
127(14)
4 Characteristics of Rural Christian Culture, 1648---1900s
141(57)
1 Crafting the Perspective
141(3)
2 Ordering the Church
144(11)
3 Repurposing the Particulars
155(5)
4 Sacralizing the Local
160(9)
5 Localizing the Cemetery
169(7)
6 Inscribing the Culture
176(22)
5 Surging toward Crescendo, 1648--1900s
198(39)
1 Betterment by Switching
199(9)
2 Betterment by Devolving
208(29)
Conclusion to Part 1
230(7)
PART 2 Divergence: The Civil and the Sacred Disunited, 1648--
Introduction to Part 2
237(2)
6 The Division of Local Sacred Communities, 1648--1817
239(23)
1 Alleviating Disunity and Priming Disunity
241(5)
2 The Empire's Birthing of Catholics, Lutherans, and Reformed as Triplets in 1648
246(9)
3 The Onset of Anachronistic History and Its Early Local Effects
255(7)
7 Ministerial Conflict, 1648--1817
262(16)
1 Alleged Encroachments
265(3)
2 Financial Interests
268(2)
3 Personal Honor and Dignity
270(2)
4 State Authority and Order
272(2)
5 Persons of the Tertiary Denomination
274(4)
8 Toleration Transformed, 1648--1817
278(30)
1 Emigration and Exile
279(2)
2 Auslauf
281(3)
3 House Churches
284(5)
4 New Church Buildings
289(5)
5 Simultaneum
294(5)
6 Freedom of Conscience
299(4)
7 Rural Collaborations and Unifications
303(5)
9 Rural Fulda amid the Evangelical Union, 1817--1850S
308(22)
1 The Evangelical Union
309(11)
2 Sacred Communities Divided Anew in Rural Fulda
320(10)
10 Rural Hanau amid the Evangelical Union, 1817--1860s
330(22)
1 Sacred Communities United and the Gemeinde Restored
330(6)
2 Authorities' Anxiety about the Use of Multiple Churches
336(6)
3 A Switch in Strategy
342(10)
11 Rural Upper Hesse amid the Evangelical Union, 1817---1900s
352(58)
1 The Union's Inauspicious Start in the Region
352(5)
2 The Union Attempted in Frankenberg
357(7)
3 Collaborations and Unifications Continue in Rural Upper Hesse
364(11)
4 The Union Thwarted in Frankenberg
375(14)
5 Collaborations and Unifications Thwarted in Rural Upper Hesse
389(21)
Conclusion to Part 2
405(5)
Epilogue 410(3)
Bibliography 413(32)
Index of Place Names 445(6)
Index of Subjects 451
David Mayes, Ph.D. (2002), University of Wisconsin-Madison, is Associate Professor of History at Sam Houston State University. His publications include Communal Christianity: The Life and Loss of a Peasant Vision in Early Modern Germany (Brill, 2004) and recent articles on rural communities, names and naming, and toleration.