拿破仑边境地区的大规模朝圣和可用帝国

IF 0.1 Q3 HISTORY
Kilian Harrer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文分析了拿破仑时代最大的朝圣事件,展示了天主教徒如何利用帝国的机会和帝国的漏洞在宗教复兴的道路上取得进展。1810年9月,20多万朝圣者涌向小省城特里尔,朝拜基督教最重要的遗物之一——耶稣圣衣。这种朝圣之所以能够发生并发展到如此巨大的规模,是因为神职精英和俗人都巧妙地驾驭了拿破仑国家建立的领土框架。在特里尔所属的莱茵边境地区,法国的霸权首先使圣物得以返回城市,但朝圣者随后利用了公共秩序的可塑性,这也是帝国统治的特征。1810年的大朝圣既不是由教会精心策划、由国家控制的自上而下的动员,也不是公开的、政治化的反对行为——即使国家官员反过来对朝圣流动和“迷信”持不可否认的敌视态度。因此,这篇文章认为,在拿破仑帝国较为和平的地区,朝圣者和朝圣组织者利用拿破仑帝国,而不是抵抗或与之合作,加速了革命后天主教的复兴。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mass Pilgrimage and the Usable Empire in a Napoleonic Borderland
Abstract This article analyses the biggest pilgrimage event of the Napoleonic era, showing how Catholics used imperial opportunities and imperial loopholes to progress on their path toward religious revival. In September 1810, more than 200,000 pilgrims rushed to the small provincial city of Trier to venerate one of Christianity's most important relics, the Holy Coat of Jesus. This pilgrimage could take place and grow to such gigantic dimensions because both clerical elites and laypeople deftly navigated territorial frameworks created by the Napoleonic state. In the Rhenish borderlands to which Trier belonged, French hegemony enabled the return of the relic to the city in the first place, but pilgrims subsequently exploited the malleability of public order that also characterized imperial governance. The great pilgrimage of 1810 represented neither a form of exclusively top-down mobilization orchestrated by the church and controlled by the state, nor an act of overt, politicized opposition – even as state officials, in turn, proved undeniably hostile to pilgrim mobility and ‘superstition’. The article therefore argues that, in the more peaceful parts of Napoleon's empire, pilgrims and pilgrimage organizers accelerated post-revolutionary Catholic renewal by using that empire rather than either resisting or collaborating with it.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
期刊介绍: “Ajalooline Ajakiri. The Estonian Historical Journal” is peer-reviewed academic journal of the Institute of History and Archaeology, University of Tartu. It accepts articles in Estonian, English or German. It is open to submissions from all parts of the world and on all fields of history, but articles, reviews and communications on the history of the Baltic region are preferred.
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