泰伯恩树:17世纪新教伦敦的天主教朝圣。

A. Seregina
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引用次数: 0

摘要

英国天主教社区的宗教文化在16 - 17世纪发生了转变,出现了一种地方天主教文化,在许多方面不同于特伦丁规范规定的模式。造成这种分歧的一个原因是,在宗教改革时期,传统的神圣场所——教堂、修道院、神龛等的丧失。在宗教改革后的时期,英国天主教徒重新诠释了这个国家及其首都的神圣地理。本文着眼于这一过程的一个方面——新朝圣地的出现。在伦敦出现了一种新的神圣场所(其神圣地位长期以来一直是冲突的主题)。这就是泰伯恩——自公元12世纪以来,这里一直是处决叛徒的不体面的地方,在公元16世纪末至17世纪初,天主教徒开始将这里视为殉道之地,因此,这里也成为了朝圣的目的地。作者讨论了在完全禁止朝圣的情况下(自1559年以来)存在的朝圣形式,其政治和宗教背景,以及描述前往泰伯恩朝圣的特殊方式。结论是,少量提到这种朝圣可以解释为英国天主教徒作为少数民族文化的宗教文化特征,他们很少在公共场合使用手势,以及天主教传教士在编辑文本时有意识的努力。后者不能控制俗人的祈祷活动,但可以定义英格兰天主教文化的形象以及同时代人和后代所看到的天主教活动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
THE TYBURN TREE: CATHOLIC PILGRIMAGES IN PROTESTANT LONDON IN THE 17TH C.
The religious culture of the English Catholic community was transformed in the 16th–17th cc. and a local Catholic culture emerged, in many ways different from the model prescribed by the Tridentine norms. One reason for that divergence was the loss of traditional sacred loci – churches, monasteries, shrines etc. during the years of the Reformation. In the post-Reformation period, English Catholics were to re-interpret the sacred geography of the country, and of its capital. The article looks into one aspect of this process – the emergence of new pilgrimage sites. A new sacral locus (which sacred status for long time was been a subject of conflict) appeared in London. That was Tyburn – the dishonorable place where traitors had been executed since the 12th c., and a site, which Catholics begun to see in late 16th early 17th cc. as a place of martyrdom, and, consequently, a pilgrimage destination. The author discusses pilgrimage the forms of pilgrimages that existed in conditions of a complete ban on the practice itself (since 1559), their political and religious contexts, as well as particular ways to describe pilgrimages to Tyburn. It is concluded that a small number oof references to such pilgrimages can be explained both by the character of the religious culture of the English Catholics as a minority culture, which used public gestures sparingly, and by conscious efforts at editing of the texts produced by Catholic missionaries. The latter could not control the laity’s devotional practices, but could instead define the image of England’s Catholic culture and its practices that was seen by contemporaries and descendants.
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