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Singing the gospel: Lutheran hymns ...
~
Brown, Christopher Boyd.
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Singing the gospel: Lutheran hymns and the success of the Reformation in Joachimsthal (Czech Republic, Magdalena Heymair, Paul Eber, Franciscus Albani).
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Singing the gospel: Lutheran hymns and the success of the Reformation in Joachimsthal (Czech Republic, Magdalena Heymair, Paul Eber, Franciscus Albani)./
Author:
Brown, Christopher Boyd.
Description:
450 p.
Notes:
Adviser: Steven E. Ozment.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International62-10A.
Subject:
History, Modern. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3028374
ISBN:
0493406514
Singing the gospel: Lutheran hymns and the success of the Reformation in Joachimsthal (Czech Republic, Magdalena Heymair, Paul Eber, Franciscus Albani).
Brown, Christopher Boyd.
Singing the gospel: Lutheran hymns and the success of the Reformation in Joachimsthal (Czech Republic, Magdalena Heymair, Paul Eber, Franciscus Albani).
- 450 p.
Adviser: Steven E. Ozment.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Harvard University, 2001.
Much recent scholarship on the Reformation has pronounced a verdict of failure on Lutheran efforts to establish a new and distinctive piety and self-conscious religious identity among the German laity. An examination of sixteenth-century Lutheran hymnody, however, shows a field in which Lutherans enjoyed undeniable success. Theologians and printers cooperated to produce a vast quantity of Lutheran music for the popular market, spreading Protestant ideas and supporting Lutheran piety.
ISBN: 0493406514Subjects--Topical Terms:
516334
History, Modern.
Singing the gospel: Lutheran hymns and the success of the Reformation in Joachimsthal (Czech Republic, Magdalena Heymair, Paul Eber, Franciscus Albani).
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Singing the gospel: Lutheran hymns and the success of the Reformation in Joachimsthal (Czech Republic, Magdalena Heymair, Paul Eber, Franciscus Albani).
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450 p.
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Adviser: Steven E. Ozment.
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Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 62-10, Section: A, page: 3519.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--Harvard University, 2001.
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Much recent scholarship on the Reformation has pronounced a verdict of failure on Lutheran efforts to establish a new and distinctive piety and self-conscious religious identity among the German laity. An examination of sixteenth-century Lutheran hymnody, however, shows a field in which Lutherans enjoyed undeniable success. Theologians and printers cooperated to produce a vast quantity of Lutheran music for the popular market, spreading Protestant ideas and supporting Lutheran piety.
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The Bohemian mining town of Joachimsthal (Jáchymov, Czech Republic) was an early recipient of Wittenberg's theology and music and made its own substantial contribution to the musical culture of Lutheran Germany. Archival sources, the sermons of Johann Mathesius, and the hymns of cantor Nicolaus Herman show that Lutheranism and its music permeated the life of the town at all levels of society. Lutheran music found a secure place not only in the boys' and girls' Latin and vernacular schools in the town, and in the public services of the church, but also in the homes of the laity, where Lutheran hymns nourished a domestic piety that sustained Lutheran identity through a generation of attempted Catholicization during the Thirty Years War.
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The commercial success of Lutheran hymns, the public and private contexts in which they were used, and the contents of the hymns themselves, all suggest a reevaluation of the character of Lutheranism in the century after the Reformation. Not only do the hymns demonstrate Lutheran skill in appropriating the various forms of sixteenth-century musical culture as a vehicle for their religious message, but they reveal a relation between Lutheran laity and clergy characterized by mutual respect and a balance between interdependence and lay independence. The laity retained a keen interest in the religious message of the hymns even as the clergy acknowledged and encouraged the right of the laity to use, teach, and apply it on their own. The hymns reveal Lutheran success in transforming not only the public institutions but also the homes and hearts of sixteenth-century Germany.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3028374
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