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Devout and Defiant - (Studies in Early Modern German History) by Kilian Harrer
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Highlights
- How Catholic pilgrims in an era of revolution challenged state authority and redefined the practice of their faith In the days of the French Revolution, as zealous government officials sought to sweep away the vestiges of a less enlightened age, they made a concerted effort to clamp down on religious "superstition" and to fix modern territorial boundaries.
- About the Author: Kilian Harrer is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Leibniz Institute of European History in Mainz, Germany.
- 312 Pages
- History, Europe
- Series Name: Studies in Early Modern German History
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About the Book
"Blending religious with social and political history, Harrer offers a new history of pilgrimage by demonstrating that pilgrims' activities in the French-German borderlands in the revolutionary decades around 1800 helped to define emerging state borders and significantly reshaped Catholicism over half a century before Lourdes"-- Provided by publisher.
Book Synopsis
How Catholic pilgrims in an era of revolution challenged state authority and redefined the practice of their faith
In the days of the French Revolution, as zealous government officials sought to sweep away the vestiges of a less enlightened age, they made a concerted effort to clamp down on religious "superstition" and to fix modern territorial boundaries. Catholic pilgrims on the western edge of German-speaking Europe, however, refused to let worldly barriers stand in the way of their devotional practices. As Kilian Harrer reveals in this groundbreaking book, pilgrimage became a form of transgressive devotion that spurred religious renewal.
By the hundreds of thousands, pilgrims exposed the limits of state authority as they traveled to shrines and holy sites across the borderlands that stretched from Luxembourg in the north to Alsace and Switzerland in the south. These Catholics evaded passport controls, crossed provocatively into Protestant territories, and went abroad to visit shrines beyond the reach of anticlerical officials. Pilgrims and pilgrimage organizers reshaped the politics of religion by grappling with shifting borders, dramatic regime change, and police repression. In the end, they reoriented Catholicism itself as they boldly confronted the state-led policing of borders and worship.
About the Author
Kilian Harrer is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Leibniz Institute of European History in Mainz, Germany.