Freaks of Fanaticism and Other Strange Events by Sabine Baring-Gould
Author:Sabine Baring-Gould
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Jovian Press
* * *
THE ANABAPTISTS OF MÜNSTER.
~
TO THE YEAR 1524 MÜNSTER, the capital of Westphalia, had remained faithful to the religion which S. Swibert, coadjutor of S. Willibrord, first Bishop of Utrecht, had brought to it in the 7th century. But then Lutheranism was introduced into it.
Frederick von Wied at that time occupied the Episcopal throne. He was brother to Hermann, Archbishop of Cologne, who was afterwards deprived for his secession to Lutheranism.
The religious revolution in the Westphalian capital at its commencement presents the same symptoms which characterised the beginning of the Reformation elsewhere. The town council were prepared to hail it as a means of overthrowing the Episcopal authority, and establishing the municipal power as supreme in the city.
Already the State of Juliers had embraced the new religion, and faith had been shaken in Osnabrück, Minden, and Paderborn, when the first symptoms appeared in Münster.
Four priests, the incumbents of the parishes of St. Lambert, St. Ludger, St. Martin, and the Lieb-Frau Church, commonly called Ueberwasser, declared for the Reform. The contemporary historian, Kerssenbroeck, an eye-witness of all he describes, says of them, “They indulged in the most violent abuse of the clergy, they cursed good works, assured their auditors that such works would not receive the smallest recompense, and permitted every one to give way to all the excesses of so-called Evangelical liberty.” They stirred up their hearers against the religious orders, and the people clamoured daily at the gates of the monasteries and nunneries, insisting on being given food; and the monks and nuns were too much frightened to refuse those whom impunity rendered daily more exacting. On the night of the 22nd March, 1525, they attacked the rich convent of nuns at Nizink, with intentions of pillaging it. They failed in this attempt, and the ringleaders were seized and led before the magistrates, followed by an excited and tumultuous crowd of men and women, “evangelically disposed,” as the chronicler says. Hoping to ally the effervescence, the magistrates asked the cause of complaint against the nuns of Nizink, and then came out the true reason, for which religious prejudice had served as a cloak. They complained that the monks and nuns exercised professions to the prejudice of the artisans; and they demanded of the magistracy that their looms should be broken, the religious forbidden to work at trades, and their superabundant goods to be distributed among the poor. The orators of the band declared in conclusion “that if the magistrates refused to grant these requests, the people would disregard their orders, displace them by force of arms, and put in their stead men trustworthy and loyal, and devoted to the interests of the citizens.” Alarmed at these threats, the magistrates yielded, and promised to take every measure satisfactory to the insurgents. On the 25th May, accordingly, the Friars of St. Francis and the nuns of Nizink were ordered to give up their looms and accounts. The friars yielded, but the ladies stoutly refused. The magistrates, however, had all the
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Tales from Both Sides of the Brain: A Life in Neuroscience by Michael S. Gazzaniga(768)
American Psychosis by Torrey E. Fuller(749)
Administrations of Lunacy by Mab Segrest(686)
Genetics by Unknown(639)
Lincoln Dreamt He Died: The Midnight Visions of Remarkable Americans from Colonial Times to Freud by Andrew Burstein(480)
Dream Symbols of the Individuation Process by C. G. Jung;Suzanne Gieser;(446)
Broadmoor Revealed: Victorian Crime and the Lunatic Asylum by Mark Stevens(444)
Muses, Madmen, and Prophets by Daniel B. Smith(425)
Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds by Mackay Charles(421)
The Mad Among Us by Gerald N. Grob(333)
Lectures on the Philosophy of History by Hegel(315)
A Biography of Loneliness by Bound Alberti Fay;(309)
The Arabic Freud by El Shakry Omnia;(298)
Jung In A Week by Ruth Snowden(295)
Jung In India by Sulagna Sengupta(290)
Ahmes’ Legacy by Marcel Danesi(278)
The Edinburgh Lectures on Mental Science (Extended Annotated Edition) by Thomas Troward(275)
The Sensory Order by F. A. Hayek(270)
Inconvenient People by Sarah Wise(269)
