Sacred Space in Early Modern Europe
$58.99 (C)
- Editors:
- Will Coster, De Montfort University, Bedford
- Andrew Spicer, Oxford Brookes University
- Date Published: October 2011
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521203197
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58.99
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Leading historians explore the many dimensions of sacred space (churches and chapels, pilgrimage sites, holy wells) during and after the religious upheavals of the early modern period through a variety of contexts and Christian religious divisions. Based on original research, these essays provide new insights into the definition and understanding of sanctity in the post-Reformation era and make an important contribution to the study of sacred space.
Read more- An innovative history of the impact of confessional change on the physical environment of early modern Europe
- Offers a genuinely pan-European collection of essays on the subject
- Features leading historians from across Europe and North America
Reviews & endorsements
"Early modern scholars and students of environment, particularly architecture, will appreicate the diversity of subjects and methodologies in this work. A brief biographical sketch of each contributor introduces the work and a twenty-five page index concludes the volume."
-Timothy Maschke, Concordia University, Wisconsin Sixteenth Century JournalSee more reviews"Coster and Spicer have gathered a geographically, religiously, and historically diverse, yet remarkably cohesive, mix of studies...Sacred Space in Early Modern Europe discloses the multiplicity of ways that early modern Catholics, Protestants, and Eastern Orthodox continuously oriented themselves, often bumping up against each other in the process, by actively creating and re-creating sites of religious meaning in relationship to larger social and cultural forces. The volume is an important contribution to early modern studies, Reformation studies, history of Christianity, and history of religions."
-Martha L. Finch, Missouri State University, Church History"This volume is innovative, informative, and strongly recommended."
-Amanda Flather, Canadian Journal of HistoryCustomer reviews
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×Product details
- Date Published: October 2011
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521203197
- length: 366 pages
- dimensions: 229 x 152 x 21 mm
- weight: 0.54kg
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: the dimension of sacred space in Reformation Europe Will Coster and Andrew Spicer
2. Sacred church and worldly tavern: reassessing early modern divide Bert Kümin
3. Sacred image and sacred space in Lutheran Germany Bridget Heal
4. Places of sanctification: the liturgical sacrality of Genevan reformed churches, 1535–66 Christian Grosse
5. 'What kinde of house a kirk is': conventicles, consecrations and the concept of sacred space in post-Reformation Scotland Andrew Spicer
6. Psalms, groans and dog-whippers: the soundscape of sacred space in the English parish church, 1547–1642 John Craig
7. A microcosm of community: burial, space and society in Chester 1598–1633 Will Coster
8. 'Apud Ecclesia': church burial and the development of funerary rooms in Moldavia Maria Craciun
9. Reading Rome as a sacred landscape, c. 1575–1635 Simon Ditchfield
10. Gardening for God: Carmelite deserts and the sacralisation of natural space in counter-Reformation Spain Trevor Johnson
11. Holywell: contesting sacred space in post-Reformation Wales Alexandra Walsham
12. The sacred space of Julien Maunoir: the re-Christianising of the landscape in seventeenth-century Brittany Elizabeth Tingle
13. Sacralising space: reclaiming civic culture in early modern France Amanda Eurich
14. Breaking images and building bridges: the making of sacred space in early modern Bohemia Howard Louthan
15. Mapping the boundaries of confession: space and urban religious life in the Diocese of Augsburg, 1648–1750 Duane Corpis.
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