Lay Confraternities and Civic Religion in Renaissance Bologna
This 1995 book analyses the social, political and religious roles of the confraternities - the lay groups through which Italians of the Renaissance expressed their individual and collective religious beliefs - in Bologna in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. These confraternities shaped the civic religious cult through charitable activities, public shrines and processions. This civic religious role expanded as the confraternities became politicised: patricians used the confraternities increasingly in order to control the civic religious cult, civic charity, and the city itself. The book examines in detail how confraternities initially provided laypeople of the artisanal and merchant classes with a means of expressing a religious life separate from, but not in opposition to, the local parish or mendicant house. By the mid-sixteenth century, artisans and merchants had few options beyond parochial confraternities which were controlled by parish priests.
- The first study in English of Renaissance Bologna since the 1930s
- Illustrates the effects of gender, class and religion in early modern society
Product details
March 2011Adobe eBook Reader
9780511887376
0 pages
0kg
2 b/w illus.
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Prologue
- 1. The early quattrocento
- 2. Lay spirituality and confraternal worship
- 3. The mechanics of worship
- 4. Communal identity, administration and finances
- 5. Confraternal charity and the civic cult in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries
- Epilogue
- Bibliography.