Letteratura scientifica selezionata sul tema "Augustine's Church (Antwerp, Belgium)"

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Articoli di riviste sul tema "Augustine's Church (Antwerp, Belgium)"

1

Tyssens, Jeffrey. "Early Secular Burials in 19th-Century Flemish Provincial Towns". Secular Studies 4, n. 1 (30 marzo 2022): 42–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/25892525-bja10028.

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Abstract In 19th-century Belgium, cemeteries and burials gave rise to a major conflict between the Catholic Church and different kinds of secular people in Belgium. While these confrontations are quite well known in large urban environments, far less research has been produced about their counterparts in small-town settings. This article studies the options secular people had in those ‘backwater’ contexts in the province of Antwerp from the first secular burials in the 1860s up to the turn of the century. Following Albert Hirschman’s ‘voice / exit / loyalty’-scheme, we focus upon the choices that could be made and who could make them within the framework of local power relations. We will show how the particularities of social integration (or the lack thereof) generated the profiles of the individuals best equipped to break with Church-dominated community rituals and help to enforce local funerary policy transformations.
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Vercruysse, Jos E. "A Scottish Jesuit from Antwerp: Hippolytus Curle". Innes Review 61, n. 2 (novembre 2010): 137–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/inr.2010.0102.

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A memorial for Mary, Queen of Scots, and for two of her ladies-in-waiting, Barbara Mowbray-Curle, wife of Gilbert Curle, a secretary of the queen, and her sister-in-law, Elizabeth Curle is kept in St Andrew's Church in Antwerp (Belgium). The monument was founded by Barbara's son, Hippolytus. After the execution of the queen the ladies left England and settled first in Paris and afterwards in Antwerp. The article concentrates on the two sons of Barbara, who became Jesuits. Little is known about the elder, James. He died in 1615 in Spain, probably still a Jesuit student. The younger one, Hippolytus (who died in 1638), acted as a manager in the Scots College in Douai (France). He is praised as one of the principal benefactors of the college. More particularly the article comments on the testament he drew up when he joined the Jesuit order in September 1618, of which an authenticated copy is kept in the Scottish Catholic Archives. It offers a telling insight into the situation of the Curle-Mowbray family in exile. It reveals also the family's major concern: the restoration of Catholicism in Scotland through the training of a suitable clergy.
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Luyckx, Jeroen. "Exhibitions: Lutheran Spring in Antwerp: Tolerance and Repression in the Sixteenth Century, Saint Andrew’s Church, Antwerp, Belgium; Luther @ Leuven 1517–2017, Maurits Sabbe Library, KU Leuven, Belgium; and Updating a Thousand Year Old Text: Erasmus, a Reformer?” Erasmus House, Brussels, Belgium". Sixteenth Century Journal 48, n. 4 (1 dicembre 2017): 1021–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/scj4804042.

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Leboutte, René. "Recent Work in Belgian Historical Demography, Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. Edited by Isabelle Devos and Muriel Neven. Revue Belge d'Histoire Contemporaine / Belgisch Tijdschrift voor Nieuwste Geschiedenis 31, 3–4, Antwerp, 2001. Pp. 311–647. €34." Journal of Economic History 63, n. 1 (marzo 2003): 258–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022050703281808.

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Ten articles and a rich selective bibliography demonstrate the vitality of Historical Demography research in Belgium. In the introductory article, the editors sum up the main progress of the discipline in Belgium since 1981 and present an updated impressive commented bibliography. Belgian researchers have broken down many stereotypes. For instance, the process of industrialization in mid-nineteenth-century Belgium did not affect the traditional urban network in a spectacular way. Old-established cities and towns like Ghent, Leuven, Verviers, and Charleroi—that receive a special attention in this volume—continued to be important urban centers as they were well before the Industrial Revolution. The stereotype of a massive rural exodus generated by the industrialization is definitively overcome. By adopting a micro-research approach, Katleen Dillen shows that migration was mostly a positive choice and less disruptive than usually considered because it took place in a dense and vivid social network (“From One Textile Centre to Another: Migrations from the District of Ghent to the City of Armentières (France) During the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century,” pp. 431–52). This absence of dramatic change in migration pattern during the industrialization—which is therefore opposite to the situation observed in the Ruhr during the same period—explains why there was no difference in fertility intensity and calendar between migrant people and the sedentary population of the industrial area of Charleroi. Interestingly Flemish migrants to Charleroi adopted the same demographic behavior as the native Walloon people. So, according to Thierry Eggerickx, the main determinant of fertility behavior is the living conditions at the place of arrival rather than the geographical and cultural origin. Eggerickx also emphasizes that the beginning of the demographic transition coincided with the economic crisis of 1873–1892. However, until now the relationship between changes in demographic behavior and economic upheaval remains unclear (“The Fertility Decline in the Industrial Area of Charleroi During the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century”). The social network should probably have played a key role during that period of economic crisis. Indeed, the importance of a dense social network clearly appears as far as the illegitimate fertility in Leuven during the economic crisis of the mid-nineteenth century is concerned. Jan Van Bavel demonstrates that the risks of pregnancy before age 26 and subsequent marriage chances did not result from isolation in town (Leuven), but that sexual activity of unmarried women of courtship age was, on the contrary, a sign of integration within the local community. However what was the role of the economic crisis on the behavior of these women? (“Malthusian Sinners: Illegitimate Fertility and Early Marriage in Times of Economic Crisis: A Case Study in Leuven, 1846–1856”). Leuven's urban society in the nineteenth century is also the place to explore the relation between age homogamy and the increasing importance of romantic love. Bart Van de Putte and Koen Matthijs question Shorter's theory by demonstrating that romantic love did not involve the lower classes. The only clear cultural change in Leuven was the spread of what is today called “a conservative model of marriage life” in which the patriarchal tradition was mixed with new family centered values (“Romantic Love and Marriage. A Study of Age Homogamy in Nineteenth Century Leuven”). This model of marriage behavior seems to correspond to the Catholic Church's doctrine on matrimonial matters. The Belgian Catholic Church managed quite well to adapt itself to social changes of the nineteenth century (Paul Servais, “The Church and the Family in Belgium, 1850–1914”). Mortality has attracted fresh research. Michel Oris and George Alter explore the relationship between migration to the city and mortality pattern. In industrial towns, migration had a positive impact on mortality in the short-term, because the newcomers were healthier than natives of the same age. However, the place of arrival—the new industrial milieu—rapidly affected the children of the migrants who were disproportionately exposed to urban epidemiological conditions. Alter and Oris stress the existence of a "epidemiological depression" between 1846 and 1880, which will need further investigation. Moreover, migration to the industrial cities was at the origin of a specific pattern of mortality: high level of infant and child mortality, lower level of adult mortality (“Paths to the City and Roads to Death: Mortality and Migration in East Belgium During the Industrial Revolution”). The persistent high level of infant mortality at the turn of the twentieth century is confirmed by Marc Debuisson's enquiry covering the whole territory of Belgium (“The Decline of Infant Mortality in the Belgian Districts at the Turn of the Twentieth Century”), meanwhile Jeroen Backs observes an increasing discrepancy between upper classes and poor people in front of death. The inequality results from a growing infant and child mortality (“Mortality in Ghent, 1850–1950: A Social Analysis of Death”).
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Matsuo, Hideko, e Koen Matthijs. "The Role of Secularization on Marriage and Conception Seasonality Patterns". Journal of Family History 43, n. 4 (17 settembre 2018): 335–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0363199018798745.

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The period comprising the second half of the nineteenth and the early twentieth century in Belgium has been described as one of rapid societal transformation including industrialization, urbanization, and, also in some extent, secularization. This is the historical period in which first mortality and later fertility also declined, facilitated by socio-economic (structural) and cultural changes, and resulting in the first demographic transition. One of the characteristics of the secularization marking this period is considered to be the reduced compliance with religious rules concerning the timing of marriages and sexual intercourse (i.e., conceptions). Against this background, the purpose of this article is twofold. It first assesses the initial extent and evolution of church control in the rapidly developing port city of Antwerp, Flanders (Belgium), in the mid-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This will be studied through a so-called daily Lent and Advent marriage and conception index. By daily, we mean that we exactly measure the timing of Advent and Lent. We secondly try to explain the determinants of the occurrence of these marriages and conceptions through individual socio-economic, cultural, and life-course factors. We use data from the unique multisource COR* historical sample, containing individual information from population registers and civil registration records (1845–1913). We find clear signs of decreasing compliance with religious rules and therefore secularization but different patterns for marriages and conceptions. Even though compliance overall decreases for both events, rules are better complied with for marriages, and in particular, first marriages. Marriages are more influenced by social control than for sexual intercourse (i.e., conceptions). The influence of stronger compliance with marriage seasonality is observed through better adherence with first conceptions, although this is in much less extent for higher-order conceptions. The occurrence of these events, in particular marriages, is determined by a number of structural, cultural, and life-course factors. Noncompliances are found more in an urban setting, older women, and later historical periods, whereas compliance is found in high social class of men. For conceptions, relatively few (significant) effects are observed, although noncompliance for maternal literacy status and compliance for paternal social class is also found indicating gender differential effects.
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Libri sul tema "Augustine's Church (Antwerp, Belgium)"

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Coninck, Barbara de. The monastic performance, The mystic contract, The ecstatic recording: Jan Fabre in St Augustine's Church in Antwerp. A cura di Fabre Jan 1958-. Brussels: Mercatorfonds, 2018.

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2

Baines, Sarah. A history of the English Church in Antwerp. Antwerp, Belgium: Imprimeries Générales Lloyd Anversois, 1994.

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3

Lambrechts-Douillez, J. Orgels in Antwerpse kerken: St. Jacobs, Carolus Borromeus, St. Paulus. Antwerpen: [Ruckers-Genootschap], 1991.

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4

Borchgrave, Christian de. Eerst Vlaanderen voor Christus: De pionierstijd van het Ruusbroecgenootschap. Averbode: Altiora, 2001.

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5

Bass, Charles D. Good news for the Lowlanders: Sermons delivered at the International Baptist Church, Antwerp, Belgium, 1999-2000. [S.l.]: C.D. Bass, 2000.

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6

Fiona, Elliot, a cura di. The Cathedral of Our Lady in Antwerp. Ghent: Ludion, 2005.

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7

Demuyt, Bart, e Simoens Elise. Een barokke parel als hedendaagse concertzaal: A baroque marvel as a contemporary concert hall. Antwerpen: Amuz, Davidsfonds Uitgeverij, 2018.

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8

St. Jacob's Antwerp Art and Counter Reformation in Rubens's Parish Church. BRILL, 2016.

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9

Christman, Victoria. Pragmatic Toleration: The Politics of Religious Heterodoxy in Early Reformation Antwerp, 1515-1555. University of Rochester Press, 2015.

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10

Innovation and Experience in Early Baroque in the Southern Netherlands: The Case of the Jesuit Church in Antwerp (Architectura Moderna). Brepols Publishers, 2007.

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