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Wyszukujesz frazę "Brotherhood" wg kryterium: Wszystkie pola


Wyświetlanie 1-2 z 2
Tytuł:
Bractwo Różańcowe w Urzędowie w XVIII wieku
The Rosary Brotherhood in Urzędów in the 18th Century
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1953897.pdf
Data publikacji:
2004
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Tematy:
bractwa
konfraternie
Bractwo Różańcowe
Urzędów
parafia
prebenda
prebendarz
seniorzy bractwa
beneficjum
uposażenie
Brotherhoods
confraternities
Rosary Brotherhood
parish
prebend
prebendary
seniors of brotherhood
benefice
salary
Opis:
Among the bigger and smaller social groups that have existed in the history, religious brotherhoods deserve a special attention. Their origin goes back to the Christian times. In the medieval Western Europe brotherhoods became a common phenomenon. In Poland, like in the whole Catholic Church, a specially dynamic development of brotherhoods took place only after the Trent Council. They became an important factor in the revival of the Church and they influenced the spiritual awareness of the society. They also played an important role in fighting Protestantism. Well-organized brotherhoods, often having their own altars, chapels and chaplains, realized their own public-religious aims contained in their statutes. In the 17th-18th centuries Urzędów had four religious brotherhoods. Urzędów was a crown town, established by King Władysław Jagiełło in 1405. It was the seat of the deanery of the same name, which belonged in that time to the Zawichost arch-deanery and the Cracow diocese. Three of the Urzędów brotherhoods were confraternities that were the best known and the most popular in Poland: The Literary Brotherhood, The St. Anna's Brotherhood, and The Rosary Brotherhood. Apart from them the unique St. Sebastian Brotherhood was active for a short time that did not exist anywhere else. The oldest of them was the Literary Brotherhood of Our Lady, which was established in 1489; the youngest was the Jesus and the Immaculate Mary Rosary Brotherhood. It was established in 1721 and accepted in 1726. It was founded by noblemen, Krzysztof Węgliński and Benedykt Węgliński. The two men also had the right of patronage over the brotherhood. By virtue of the foundation and erection the brotherhood had its own benefice (rosary prebend), chapel with a fraternal altar in it, and its own prebendary. In his account of 1781 the inspector states that at the beginning the prebend had its own chapel adjacent to the parish church, but after the church had been burned down in 1755, and another one was built, the chapel was situated in one of the aisles. The confraternity's main aim was to propagate the cult and glory of Our Lady as well as promoting and practicing the rosary services that were headed by an appointed priest who did the religious service in the brotherhood. The prebendaries were chosen and presented by the founders. The successive prebendaries in Urzędów were: Rev. Paweł Smoleński, Rev. Krakowiecki, Rev. Błażej Pezielski, Rev. Franciszek Szymański, Rev. Adrian Pawełecki. The last prebendary in the 18th century was Rev. Szymon (Mateusz) Tymiński. The successors of the confraternity founders had the right of presentation. Brotherhoods, especially the bigger ones, had their own administrations. They were headed by the seniors who were obliged to see to the whole of their activities. Also the brotherhood scribe was an important person, as he entered the names of new members of the brotherhood in a special register; he also collected and noted down the membership fees. In the Urzędów Rosary Brotherhood most of the mentioned functions and tasks were performed by two trusted members, usually representatives of the municipal authorities, and, as a rule, wealthy people, called “provisories” or “seniors”. The religious associations' activities were always based on bigger or smaller financial foundations. Of the Urzędów ones the Rosary Brotherhood had decidedly the most financial resources. Its wealth resulted from the benefice guaranteed by the founders and collators. Besides the property belonging to the brotherhood itself, their prebendary had his own, ample salary. Both the prebendary and the brotherhood itself had estates, bequeathed sums of money on the estates belonging to the Urzędów townspeople, and revenues coming from collections, contributions and alms from the parishioners. The fall of brotherhoods came in the period of a full bloom of the Enlightenment in Europe and the development of the so-called Catholic Enlightenment. In the period immediately preceding the final fall of Poland in 1795 all brotherhoods active there were doomed to wretched existence and slowly they ended their life in the initial phase of the occupation of the Polish lands by the three invaders. In 1801 only the Rosary Brotherhood still worked at the Urzędów church, while the remaining ones stopped their activities, and their benefices were given to the parish after the fire of the parish church in 1755. The other sources of income and charity bequests were assigned for building a new church. The Rosary Brotherhood continued its work after Poland lost sovereignty, through most of the 19th century. However, the political and social conditions in which it had to work was completely new; also the situation in which the Polish Church found itself was completely different from the previous one.
Źródło:
Roczniki Humanistyczne; 2004, 52, 2; 25-55
0035-7707
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Humanistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Bractwa charytatywne w Polsce od średniowiecza do końca XVIII wieku
Brotherhoods of charity in Poland from the Middle Ages to the late eighteenth century
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1023522.pdf
Data publikacji:
2014-06-27
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II
Tematy:
bractwa religijne
bractwa charytatywne
bractwa szpitalne
bractwa miłosierdzia
Piotr Skarga
Michał Jerzy Poniatowski
religious brotherhoods
brotherhood of charity
hospital fraternities
brotherhood of mercy
Opis:
Religious brotherhoods were one of the institutions, apart from schools and hospitals, which in past centuries played an important role in the lives of individual parishes, towns and villages. They were associations – church communities, with legal personality, bringing together people for religious purposes, regardless of gender and social origin. Different kinds of brotherhoods, including the ones of charitable and protective nature became a common phenomenon between the 11th and the 15th centuries in the West. In the thirteenth century, they also began to take hold on Polish soil, referring to Western patterns. Hospital fraternities (fraternitas hospitales) have the oldest tradition of secular charities in the Polish land. Their aim was to provide people, who often did the activities connected with the medieval hospital. Some of them even founded and ran hospitals. Just like all other religious brotherhoods, at the earliest, in the thirteenth century, they appeared in Silesia. In the group of hospital fraternities the brotherhood of the Holy Spirit played a special role. That brotherhood was associated only with hospitals run by the Order of the same name, so-called ‘duchaki’. Brotherhoods of the poor were far more common in the Polish land. Their main aim was to focus on charitable activities and they encompassed almost all the lands of the Polish Republic. Their heyday was primarily in the fifteenth and the early sixteenth century. Brotherhoods of the poor developed evenly in terms of chronology in the whole land of the Polish state. Those fraternities exercised complete control over the lives of every beggar who was in the town; they regulated districts, begging procedures and oversaw the behaviour of the poor. The chief duty of brotherhoods of the poor was to take care of the sick in hospitals and their homes. The duty of brothers was also a concern for the dead, especially the poor and homeless, Christian burial and funeral as well as the prayers for those whom they took care of. In the atmosphere of the reforms of the Council of Trent (1545-1563), religious brotherhoods began again spontaneously developing in Poland. The most important of the new brotherhoods of charity was a brotherhood of mercy, established at the end of the sixteenth century by the preacher Jesuit Piotr Skarga. The first model brotherhood of mercy was organized by Skarga in 1584, and it was attached to the Jesuit Church of St. Barbara in Krakow. Other brotherhoods, based on Skarga’s pattern, were formed in major cities of the Polish Republic, including Vilnius, Warsaw, Poznań, Pułtusk, Łowicz, Lviv, Zamość, Rzeszów, Lublin, Przemyśl. The period of the development of brotherhoods of mercy occurred in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century. Then those organizations gradually disappeared and were forgotten. The idea of Piotr Skarga’s brotherhoods of mercy was renewed in the new spirit of the Enlightenment in the 1770s by Bishop, later Primate Michał Jerzy Poniatowki. They were not to be one of many brotherhoods, but the ones to which the others were to be “subordinate”. Poniatowski incorporated all the previous devotional confraternities into them, along with their funds, used henceforth for the purpose not so much pious as socially useful. Reborn in the era of the first partition, brotherhoods of mercy, compared to their earlier prototype, due to the obligation of establishing them at every parish, had a more common and universal character, and were involved in more diverse charitable, social and educational activities. Apart from the above mentioned brotherhoods of charity, which were the most famous and widespread in the Polish land in the Middle Ages and modern times, there were a number of other charitable associations. Those were: brotherhoods of priests, brotherhoods of good death, funeral brotherhoods, brotherhoods of St. Barbara, brotherhoods of St. Lazarus, brotherhoods of St. Roch, brotherhoods of St. Sebastian, brotherhoods of St. Benon, brotherhoods of St. Nicholas and St. Jacob. Some devotional brotherhoods also dealt with charity. Although they mainly focused on the celebration of different forms of worship, the statutes of many explicitly advocated doing the acts of mercy toward other people. A brotherhood which stood out in this field was the literary one.
Źródło:
Archiwa, Biblioteki i Muzea Kościelne; 2014, 101; 233-296
0518-3766
2545-3491
Pojawia się w:
Archiwa, Biblioteki i Muzea Kościelne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-2 z 2

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