You are here: Home Modules Off to the ‘holy places’ – Pilgrims and pilgrimages in the Middle Ages
Personal tools

HABSBURGER QUIZ

ONLINE TICKETS

 

Off to the ‘holy places’ – Pilgrims and pilgrimages in the Middle Ages


Modulinformation
(obligatorisch)
17073
True
1
save
Off to the ‘holy places’ – Pilgrims and pilgrimages in the Middle Ages
(übernommen)
Angabe des Autors nach dem Muster: Martin Müller
7557
True
1
save
Christina Linsboth
(obligatorisch)
Kurzangabe der wichtigsten Daten / Anrisstext
17074
True
1
save
People who went on pilgrimages could expect not only to find religious salvation but also to have to spend a considerable amount of money.
Textangaben
17075
True
1
save

Since the fifth century Christians had been making more and more pilgrimages – out of piety or because of vows they had made or penance they were required to do. They also hoped that they would find a cure or at least relief for their physical afflictions. In the Middle Ages it was mainly places with famous religious relics that the pilgrims visited, in later centuries those where there had been religious apparitions.

However, there was not only a religious but also a financial side to pilgrimages. First the journeys had to be paid for, and pilgrims were faced with a whole range of costs: board and lodging, personal hygiene, clothing and shoes, tolls for the use of roads and bridges, permits and passports, as well as alms for the needy, votive offerings and many other items. While some pilgrims set off more or less without any money and paid their way by doing harvest work, others received financial suppport from relatives, friends or neighbours. Many of those who went on pilgrimages also took goods or valuables with them which they sold as they went along, or they acted as messengers. As a result the line between trade and pilgrimages was sometimes blurred.

Pilgrimages brought money into circulation and were thus also of economic importance. It cost money to put up and maintain shrines and to pay the clergy employed at them, and so did the upkeep of roads, bridges and hostels. The trade in relics and devotional objects as well as the sale of guidebooks for pilgrims also constituted a branch of the economy. In addition pilgrimages created demand for a whole range of services. For example, rich pilgrims could afford to employ companions who acted as guides or interpreters. It was also by no means unusual to send a ‘substitute’ on a pilgrimage, who would receive payment or some other form of remuneration.

Medien
(übernommen)
221
True
1
ignore
(übernommen)
Dem Inhalt zugeordnete Bildergalerie
49
True
1
ignore
auf-zu-den-heiligen-orten
Bildergalerie
Off to the ‘holy places’
(übernommen)
Ein Video
50
True
1
ignore
(übernommen)
Abbildung eines historischen Quellendokuments
51
True
1
ignore
Zitate
(übernommen)
Legen Sie hier ein Textzitat ab
222
True
1
ignore
Weitere Informationen
(übernommen)
11731
True
1
save
Kriegbaum, Gerhard: Reliquienverehrung und Wallfahrt, in: Mayr, Markus (Hrsg.): Von Goldenen Gebeinen. Wirtschaft und Reliquie im Mittelalter [Geschichte und Ökonomie 9], Innsbruck/Wien/München 2001, 233-244. Ohler, Norbert: Überlegungen zur Finanzierung von Pilgerreisen, in: Mayr, Markus (Hrsg.): Von Goldenen Gebeinen. Wirtschaft und Reliquie im Mittelalter [Geschichte und Ökonomie 9], Innsbruck/Wien/München 2001, 245-259
Attributszuweisungen
(übernommen)
Weise Attribute zu
Zeitliche Einordnung
(übernommen)
Linken Sie hier bitte zu einem Zeitraum.
-1
True
1
save
Beschlagwortung
(übernommen)
Ordnen Sie der Story themtische Schlagwörter zu
-1
True
1
save
Bildergalerie Off to the ‘holy places’
 
Document Actions
Navigation