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Marian Pilgrimage and the Performance of Male Privilege in Eighteenth-Century Augsburg

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 September 2012

Duane J. Corpis*
Affiliation:
Cornell University

Extract

Popular Marian devotion played a vital role in the Catholic Church of Germany during the early modern period, especially during the “golden age of religious revival” experienced by post-Tridentine, baroque popular Catholicism. For example, at least ninety-seven local Marian shrines scattered throughout the diocese of Augsburg attracted pilgrims in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The most famous was certainly Andechs, which drew half a million visitors each year in the seventeenth century from all over the Holy Roman Empire. In turn, Catholics from the diocese of Augsburg traveled beyond the bishopric's borders to major and minor shrines near and far, such as Altötting in Bavaria. Yet while major sites dedicated to the Virgin Mary such as Andechs and Altötting reflected the intensity of ongoing popular Marian devotions, the breadth of the Virgin Mary's cultural significance is signaled by the large number of Marian shrines within the diocese itself, such as Kobel or Violau, which were mostly small, local affairs that attracted primarily nearby populations as pilgrims and supplicants.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Conference Group for Central European History of the American Historical Association 2012

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References

1 Hsia, R. Po-chia, The World of Catholic Renewal 1540–1770 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), 205Google Scholar. See also Forster, Marc R., Catholic Revival in the Age of the Baroque: Religious Identity in Southwest Germany, 1550–1750 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007), 83105Google Scholar.

2 Brems, Franz Josef, Wir sind unterwegs . . . 500 bayerische Marienwallfahrtsorte (St. Ottilien: EOS Verlag, 1992)Google Scholar. His assessment is based on the modern boundaries of the diocese of Augsburg, rather than its early modern ecclesiastical jurisdiction.

3 Archiv des Bistums Augsburg (hereafter ABA), BO 4668 Ettenbeuren, letter from Franz Anton Schmid, priest in Günzburg, to Johann Casimir Röls, January 7, 1703.

4 ABA, BO 4668 Ettenbeuren, list of miracles, January 24, 1703.

5 This dynamic was not new or peculiar to the eighteenth century. In fact, a wave of pilgrimages in the late Middle Ages also met with the Church's suspicion. The major difference is that the post-Tridentine Church had a more centralized institutional apparatus to deal with the threat of unrestrained popular piety. Rule, Belinda, “Reformers and the ‘Crazy Rabble’ in Fifteenth- and Sixteenth-Century Germany,” Melbourne Historical Journal 30 (2002): 6679Google Scholar; and Zika, Charles, “Hosts, Processions, and Pilgrimages: Controlling the Sacred in Fifteenth-Century Germany,” Past and Present 118 (1988): 4959CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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7 Though mostly concerned with how pilgrimage shrines and miracles served as useful propaganda for the Bavarian Catholic Church, Philip M. Soergel also discussed the concern expressed by some Church authorities over the excesses of pilgrimage culture. Soergel, Philip M., “Spiritual Medicine for Heretical Poison: The Propagandistic Uses of Legends in Counter-Reformation Bavaria,” Historical Reflections/Reflexions historiques 17 (1991): 125149Google Scholar.

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9 According to Marc Forster, the many competing interests that intersected in early modern sacred places “reflected the dynamic tension between local religion, regional Catholicism, and the international Church.” Forster, Catholic Revival, 62.

10 Siemons, Stefan, Frömmigkeit im Wandel. Veränderungen in den Formen der Volksfrömmigkeit durch Aufklärung und Säkularisation (Augsburg: Heimatverein für den Landkreis Augsburg e.V., 2002), 153Google Scholar.

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12 Angelika Hauke, “Die Wallfahrt Violau im Spiegel ihres Mirakelbuchs” (MA thesis, University of Augsburg, 1981).

13 For basic background, see Rummel, Peter, “Katholisches Leben in der Reichsstadt Augsburg (1650–1806),” Jahrbuch des Vereins für Augsburger Bistumsgeschichte e.V. 18 (1994): 9798Google Scholar.

14 This narrative is based on three files at the Stadtarchiv Augsburg (hereafter StAAug): Katholisches Wesensarchiv (hereafter KWA) B 27/14, KWA J 7/7, and KWA B 8/20. These files comprehensively document the Violau pilgrimage in the eighteenth century. It also draws from a “Bericht des Creitzgangs von Augsburg wie solcher in Violau Jährlich gehalten wird,” Pfarrarchiv Violau Akt III/1/II, Beilage 10, which Stefan Siemons brought to my attention.

15 Siemons, Frömmigkeit im Wandel, 153.

16 See footnote 15.

17 The following narrative of the events that took place in 1755 and 1756 is mostly assembled from an original document signed and sealed by Franz Joseph Frölich, Johann Baptist Hafner, and Nicholas Entz, “Eügentliche Begebenheit des Violauischen Creütz-gangs!,” Pfarrarchiv Violau II/1/I, Beilage 1a. A copy of this document with only minor differences exists in StAAug, KWA B 27/14.

18 Because this unofficial pilgrimage was a serious act of defiance, the historical records, even the narratives produced by the pilgrims themselves, do not provide much detail about it. And yet the fact that the number of fifty-seven participants is always given in the documentation resists complete silencing of this event.

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21 Freitag, Volks- und Elitenfrömmigkeit, 262.

22 Ibid., 263.

23 Ibid., 263.

24 Ibid., 268.

25 Ibid., 272–272.

26 Habermas, Wallfahrt und Aufruhr, 84.

27 Ibid., 84.

28 Ibid., 92. On the unruliness of some Bavarian pilgrims, see also Lederer, David, Madness, Religion, and the State in Early Modern Europe: A Bavarian Beacon (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006), 114119Google Scholar.

29 Habermas, Wallfahrt und Aufruhr, 92, 100. Other work on early modern pilgrimage has made explicit reference to the models and theories of Victor and Edith Turner, including the following: Lepovitz, Helena Waddy, “The Religious Context of Crisis Resolution in the Votive Paintings of Catholic Europe,” Journal of Social History 23 (1990): 755782, especially 762CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Rule, “Reformers and the ‘Crazy Rabble.’”

30 Sallnow, M. J., “Communitas Reconsidered: The Sociology of Andean Pilgrimage,” Man 16, no. 2 (1981): 171CrossRefGoogle Scholar. More recently, see Eade, John and Sallnow, Michael, eds., Contesting the Sacred: The Anthropology of Christian Pilgrimage (Urbana and Chicago, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2000)Google Scholar, especially Sallnow's contribution “Pilgrimage and Cultural Fracture in the Andes,” 137–153.

31 Sallnow, “Communitas Reconsidered,” 175.

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34 Luria, Territories of Grace.

35 See François, Étienne, Die unsichtbare Grenze. Protestanten und Katholiken in Augsburg 1648–1806 (Sigmaringen: Jan Thorbecke, 1991), 9299Google Scholar; Clasen, Claus-Peter, Streiks und Aufstände der Augsburger Weber im 17. und 18. Jahrhundert (Augsburg: Schwäbische Forschungsgemeinschaft, 1993), 8587Google Scholar.

36 StAAug, Hochzeitamtsprotokolle, 1738, 438.

37 StAAug, Handwerkerakten Kt 27, Bäckenhaus, 1750–1778.

39 StAAug, Handwerkerakten 219, Kt 180, Kartenmacher, letter dated September 17, 1731.

40 StAAug, Handwerkerakten, Krammer, petition dated June 1774.

42 Frölich, Hafner, and Entz, “Eügentliche Begebenheit.”

43 An undated note, probably from the 1750s, reports that the Brotherhood had already gathered 1750 gulden in capital investments. StAAug, KWA B 27/14, f. 72r.

44 I first encountered this painting in Stefan Siemons's narrative of the Augsburgers' defense of Violau. Siemons, Frömmigkeit im Wandel, 173–174.

45 “Jetzt der Creitzgang abgestellet war / Von einem ganz alleinig, / als dieß die Bürger wurden gwahr / Sich zeigten Unß ganz einig. / die antworth war: sie wollten auch / den Creitzgang helfen bschüzen / d-Ehr Mariae nach Violau / aus Liebe Unterstüzen.” Ibid., 173.

46 “Jeder Bürger zeigt sein Treu, das officium war Behent / Unsrer Bitt auch stimmet bey.” Ibid., 174.

47 On uses of petitions to resolve social conflict within a community, see Würgler, Andreas, “Voices from Among the ‘Silent Masses’: Humble Petitions and Social Conflicts in Early Modern Central Europe,” in Petitions in Social History, ed. van Voss, Lex Herma (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2002), 1134, esp. 22–25CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Most importantly, Würgler points out that historians can use the petition to shed light on where social fault lines existed in a local community. Most studies of petitioning focus on how subjects improvisationally appealed to secular, state authorities: Fuhrmann, Rosi, Kümin, Beat, and Würgler, Andreas, “Supplizierende Gemeinden. Aspekte einer vergleichenden Quellenbetrachtung,” in Gemeinde und Staat, ed. Blickle, Peter (Munich: Oldenbourg, 1998)Google Scholar; Grüne, Niels, “Local Demand for Order and Government Intervention: Social Group Conflicts as Statebuilding Factors in Villages of the Rhine Palatinate, c. 1760–1810,” in Empowering Interactions: Political Cultures and the Emergence of the State in Europe, 1300–1900, ed. Holenstein, André, Blockmans, Wim, and Mathieu, Jon (Abingdon, UK: Ashgate, 2009), 173186Google Scholar.

48 StAAug, KWA I 7/7, document dated December 13, 1761.

49 Schöttl, Julius, Die Wallfahrtskirche Violau und ihr Baumeister David Höbel von Augsburg (Günzburg: Vereinigte Druckereien, Kunst- und Verlagsanstalten, no date), 2930, 32, 36Google Scholar.

50 On the commissioning of Marian art in churches, chapels, and shrines, see Heal, Bridget, The Cult of the Virgin Mary in Early Modern Germany: Protestant and Catholic Piety, 1500–1648 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007); Forster, Catholic Revival, 7683Google Scholar.

51 StAAug, KWA B 27/14, decree dated December 30, 1780.

52 Under Wenzeslaus's initiative, the “superstitious” use of church bells magically to ward off oncoming storms was abolished, cleverly replaced instead by the use of bells during storms to call parishioners to prayer (ABA, DA 12/99, Document Nr. 21, mandate issued by Wenceslaus's pro-vicar Thomas Joseph von Haiden, dated May 11, 1784). On other reforms, see Marx, Jacob, Geschichte des Erzstifts Trier, d.i.: der Stadt Trier & des Trier. Landes, als Churfürstenthum und als Erzdiöcese, von den ältesten Zeiten bis zum Jahre 1816, vol. 3 (Trier: Linz'schen Buchhandlung, 1864), 163167Google Scholar.

53 Staatsarchiv Augsburg, Hochstift Augsburg MüB Lit. Nr. 180, “Entwurf zukünftiger Feÿertags-Ordnung in dem Bistum Augsburg pro 1771.”

54 StAAug, KWA B 27/14, decree of Bishop Clemens Wenzeslaus, December 30, 1780.

55 StAAug, KWA B 27/14, f. 2r-v of petition to the Catholic magistrates, November 11, 1781.

56 StAAug, KWA B 27/14, f. 9v of petition to the Catholic magistrates, November 11, 1781.

57 StAAug, KWA B 27/14, f. 10r of petition to the Catholic magistrates, November 11, 1781.

58 StAAug, KWA B 27/14, f. 11r-v of petition to the Catholic magistrates, November 11, 1781.

59 StAAug, KWA B 27/14, petition, August 11, 1787.

60 StAAug, KWA B 27/14, letter from Catholic clergy, assistant mayor, and city council of Augsburg to the bishop, 1781, f. 28v; StAAug, KWA B 27/14, letter from Catholic Mayor Jakob Wilhelm Langenmantel, July 16, 1786.

61 StAAug, KWA B27/14, joint petition defending the pilgrimages to Lechfeld, Klimmach, and Violau, November 10, 1781.

62 StAAug, KWA B 27/14, mandate, April 15, 1788.

63 Luebke, David, “Naïve Monarchism and Marian Veneration in Early Modern Germany,” Past and Present, no. 154 (Feb. 1997): 71106CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

64 Mayr, Anselm, Sammlung historischer Notizen über Violau nebst einer Zugabe von Betrachtungen, Herzens-Ergißungen und Gebeten etc. etc. zu Nutz und Frommen heilsbegieriger Wallfahrer (Kempten: Jos. Hartmann, 1870)Google Scholar.

65 It is outside the scope of this article to analyze fully why women were readmitted to the pilgrimage in the late nineteenth century. Over the course of the nineteenth century, male public performances of power became increasingly attached to rituals of the bureaucratic state, the secular public sphere, and the marketplace rather than rituals of religion and piety, which left once again a space open for women to reclaim public expressions of religious piety. But by this time, such forms of piety as pilgrimages were less an expression of public prestige and more an expression of a feminized devotion. Women, habituated to the spaces of the household and accustomed to modes of piety focused on familial and personal devotions, reasserted themselves in the religious sphere through pilgrimage, but by then the meaning of these pilgrimages had already changed. Rebekka Habermas offers a compelling analysis of the gendered transformations of a bourgeois religiosity from the late eighteenth century, when a generally gender-neutral “intimization” (geschlechtsunspezifischeIntimisierung”) of religion began, through the nineteenth century, when the piety of the burger became strongly associated with women and the family in the private sphere (geschlechtsspezifische “Familiarisierung” von Religion im Privaten) and later developed into a predominately female religious public sphere involving women's participation in institutional religion. Habermas, Rebekka, “Weibliche Religiosität—oder: Von der Fragilität bürgerlicher Identitäten,” in Wege zur Geschichte des Bürgertums, ed. Tenfelde, Klaus and Wehler, Hans-Ulrich (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1994)Google Scholar. See also Schlögl, Rudolf, “Sünderin, Heilige oder Hausfrau? Katholische Kirche und weibliche Frömmigkeit um 1800,” in Wunderbare Erscheinungen. Frauen und katholische Frömmigkeit im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert, ed. von Olenhusen, Irmtraud Götz (Paderborn: Ferdinand Schöningh, 1995), 1350Google Scholar. On the feminization of religion in nineteenth-century Europe, see Brown, Callum G., The Death of Christian Britain: Understanding Secularisation, 1800–2000 (Abingdon and New York: Routledge, 2009)Google Scholar; Ford, Caroline, Divided Houses: Religion and Gender in Modern France (Ithaca, NY, and London: Cornell University Press, 2005)Google Scholar. For both a historiographical review and some warnings about the concept of feminization of religion, see Ford, Caroline, “Religion and Popular Culture in Modern Europe,” The Journal of Modern History 65 (1993): 152175, esp. 167–169CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

66 On the complex process by which the post-Tridentine Church reformed, appropriated, and co-opted lay Marian devotion during the Counter-Reformation, see Heal, The Cult of the Virgin Mary. On the reform measures of “enlightened“ Catholicism, see Siemons, Frömmigkeit im Wandel, 19–24, 167–185; Freitag, Volks- und Elitenfrömmigkeit, 317–357; Habermas, Wallfahrt und Aufruhr; and Forster, Marc R., Catholic Germany from the Reformation to the Enlightenment (New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2007)Google Scholar, especially chap. 6.

67 StAAug, KWA B 10/2–14, “Abänderung. Mit den Kreuzgangen nach Violau und Klim[m]ach,” June 11, 1787.

68 ABA, BO 2474, Dinkelsbühl 1723–1758. Andächtiges Gebett zu der wunderthätigen und schmertzhafften schweissenden Mutter Gottes Maria, auf Unser Lieben Frauen Altar zu Dünckelsbühl in Schwaben (Dinkelsbühl: Caspar Shultes, 1729)Google Scholar.

69 Stefan Siemons used these same examples in his history of Violau, but whereas he focused on the theological contexts and debates concerning Bilderverehrung, I am more interested in questions of social and institutional praxis and power. Siemons, Frömmigkeit im Wandel, 165.