The Miracle of Amsterdam: Biography of a Contested Devotion

Awards:   Winner of Catholic Press Association Book Award: History 2019 (United States) Winner of Catholic Press Association Book Award: History, Third Place 2020 (United States)
Author:   Charles Caspers ,  Peter Jan Margry
Publisher:   University of Notre Dame Press
ISBN:  

9780268105655


Pages:   464
Publication Date:   31 May 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Miracle of Amsterdam: Biography of a Contested Devotion


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Awards

  • Winner of Catholic Press Association Book Award: History 2019 (United States)
  • Winner of Catholic Press Association Book Award: History, Third Place 2020 (United States)

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Charles Caspers ,  Peter Jan Margry
Publisher:   University of Notre Dame Press
Imprint:   University of Notre Dame Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.790kg
ISBN:  

9780268105655


ISBN 10:   0268105650
Pages:   464
Publication Date:   31 May 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction Part 1. Creation and expansion of a cult (1345-1500) 1. The rise of Amsterdam 2. Religious context 3. The Miracle 4. Corpus Christi and Sacraments of Miracle 5. The bishop and the count 6. Miracles of the Miracle 7. Processions through the city Part 2. In the Habsburgs’ Favor (1500-1600) 8. Royal interest in the Holy Stead 9. The Habsburgs and national consciousness 10. Eucharistic symbolism 11. The Reformation comes to Holland 12. A women’s resistance movement and the city’s identity 13. The failed coup of the Anabaptists in 1535 14. Disciplining faith and cult 15. 1566, the “miraculous year” 16. The end of Amsterdam as an international place of pilgrimage Part 3. The Miracle on the margins (1600-1795) 17. Hidden devotion 18. Catholic hope and Reformed fear 19. The Miracle expressed 20. The Miracle celebrated 21. The Miracle weighed up Part 4. The battle for public space (1795-1881) 22. A velvet revolution: change and continuity 23. 1845: the “Feast of Folly” 24. Antipapism and the ban on public space 25. The “Ultramontane miracle disease” Part 5. The Silent Walk as a national symbol of identity (1881-1960) 26. The construction of the Silent Walk 27. Cult versus cultural heritage 28. A national cult 29. The practice of the Walk 30. The international Eucharistic movement 31. Politics and ideology: the interwar years and the Second World War 32. The post-war cult: climax and catharsis Part 6. Revolution and the reinvention of tradition (1960-2015) 33. Reconstruction and affluence 34. Revolution in the long 1960s 35. Religion, market, and tradition 36. Ecumenical harmony? 37. Continuing, broken, restored, and new traditions Part 7. Conflict or consensus? Route of the Silent Walk Timeline Sources and literature Index

Reviews

The book is the first to provide a synthesis of the historical work on the Amsterdam cult and the curious religious practices that developed around it. It is one of the great achievements of this book that the authors can convince their readers of how the ritual has its own chapters. The scholarly work is impressive. The authors combine well-known historical facts and figures with smaller stories and testimonies by lay Catholics that might seem trivial at first but prove to be particularly meaningful and telling. --Tine Van Osselaer, Ruusbroec Institute of the University of Antwerp The subtitle 'Biography of a Contested Devotion' aptly describes The Miracle of Amsterdam. This is the account of a devotional cult in Amsterdam from its origins in 1345 to the present day, thus a period of almost six hundred years. Despite the fact that the book has two authors, its authorial voice is remarkably uniform and consistent. The book is impeccably researched, elegantly written, and judicious in its handling of sometimes very tricky evidence. I found it to be a deeply insightful, balanced, humane treatment of an important topic. --Daniel Hobbins, University of Notre Dame


Author Information

Charles Caspers is an expert in the field of popular devotions, spirituality, liturgy, and mission history. Together with Peter Jan Margry he published a four-volume study on pilgrimage sites in the Netherlands. He is a senior fellow of the Titus Brandsma Institute in Nijmegen. Peter Jan Margry is professor of European ethnology at the University of Amsterdam and a senior fellow at the Meertens Institute. He is the editor of Shrines and Pilgrimage in the Modern World: New Itineraries into the Sacred.

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