The Shrine of St. Winefride and Social Control in Early Modern England and Wales

M. Bryson
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Abstract

In 1534, Henry VIII declared himself the supreme head of the Church of England. In the years that followed, his advisors carried out an agenda to reform the Church. In 1536, the Crown condemned pilgrimages and the veneration of saints’ shrines and relics. By the end of the seventeenth century, nearly every shrine in England and Wales had been destroyed or fell into disuse except for St. Winefride’s shrine in Holywell, Wales. The shrine has continued to be a pilgrimage destination to the present day without disruption. Contemporary scholars have credited the shrine’s survival to its connections with the Tudor and Stuart regimes, to the successful negotiation for its shared use as both a sacred and secular space, and to the missionary efforts of the Jesuits. Historians have yet to conduct a detailed study of St. Winefride’s role in maintaining social order in recusant communities. This article argues that the Jesuits and pilgrims at St. Winefride’s shrine cooperated to create an alternative concept of social order to the legal and customary orders of Protestant society.
近代早期英格兰和威尔士的圣怀恩弗里德神殿与社会控制
1534年,亨利八世宣布自己为英国国教的最高领袖。在接下来的几年里,他的顾问们实施了一项改革教会的议程。1536年,英国王室谴责朝觐和对圣坛和圣物的崇拜。到17世纪末,英格兰和威尔士几乎所有的神龛都被摧毁或废弃了,除了威尔士霍利韦尔的圣怀恩弗里德神龛。直到今天,靖国神社仍然是一个朝圣地,没有受到破坏。当代学者认为,这座神社之所以能幸存下来,要归功于它与都铎王朝和斯图亚特王朝的联系,归功于双方就其作为神圣和世俗空间的共同用途进行的成功谈判,以及耶稣会士的传教努力。历史学家们还没有详细研究圣怀恩弗里德在维持不情愿的社区的社会秩序方面所起的作用。本文认为,耶稣会士和圣怀恩弗里德神社的朝圣者合作创造了一种替代新教社会的法律和习惯秩序的社会秩序概念。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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