Irish Pilgrimage: Holy wells and popular Catholic devotion. (Reviews).Irish Pilgrimage: Holy Wells and Popular Catholic Devotion. By Michael P. Carroll (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Johns Hopkins University, mainly at Baltimore, Md. Johns Hopkins in 1867 had a group of his associates incorporated as the trustees of a university and a hospital, endowing each with $3.5 million. Daniel C. Press, 1999. pp. ix plus 226. $38.00). Since the appearance in 1972 of Emmet Larkin's seminal article "The Devotional Revolution in Ireland, 1850-75," (1) Irish historians A list of Irish historians is presented in this article, from the earliest times up to the present day, by historical periods and in alphabetically order for easier reference. have gotten used to the idea that virtually universal compliance with canonical norms by Irish Catholics actually began in the nineteenth century. There is no longer any serious doubt that the extraordinarily high levels of religious practice which set Catholics in twentieth-century Ireland apart from their co-religionists in the rest of western Europe Western Europe The countries of western Europe, especially those that are allied with the United States and Canada in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (established 1949 and usually known as NATO). supplanted a pre-Famine regime in which many Catholics, especially in Gaelic-speaking areas of the north and west, seldom attended mass. Debate continues, however, on how to characterize and explain the change, and an important focus of that debate is the relationship between the tridentine official model of Catholic practice which was almost universally observed by Catholics by 1900 and the array of "superstitious" beliefs and practices which preceded it. Into this somewhat desultory des·ul·to·ry adj. 1. Moving or jumping from one thing to another; disconnected: a desultory speech. 2. Occurring haphazardly; random. See Synonyms at chance. discussion among historians a sociologist has now tossed a bombshell. Michael Carroll Michael Carroll may be:
1. in dog conformation, used to describe overdevelopment of the shoulder muscles. 2. vernacular pet name for a cow. , he argues that the resulting system suited the kin-based society of that period, and especially its elite, by ensuring that feuds between kin groups would not be disturbed by the inconven ient ritual requirement of a peaceable peace·a·ble adj. 1. Inclined or disposed to peace; promoting calm: They met in a peaceable spirit. 2. Peaceful; undisturbed. gathering for mass each Sunday. This syncretic syn·cre·tism n. 1. Reconciliation or fusion of differing systems of belief, as in philosophy or religion, especially when success is partial or the result is heterogeneous. 2. devotional regime was not seriously challenged within the Catholic community until an alternative social structure emerged in the eighteenth century. That structure, at least in the Catholic heartland around Dublin and the southern ports, was dominated by well-off commercial farmers and their clerical cousins. The sexual license and faction fights accompanying the festive "patterns" (patron saints' days) where the popular devotions also occurred were at variance with the interests of this new class in a stable social order and the integrity of their agricultural patrimony PATRIMONY. Patrimony is sometimes understood to mean all kinds of property but its more limited signification, includes only such estate, as has descended in the same family and in a still more confined sense, it is only that which has descended or been devised in a direct line from the . It was this social change which led to the suppression of popular devotions and the triumph of canonical practice. The effects of this second devotional revolution were obscured by the presence of the enormous underclass of cottiers and laborers, who did not share the interests or the values of the strong farmers, until that underclass was eliminated by the Famine and its aftermath. Carroll's explanation of the "second" devotional revolution is plausible and consistent with recent empirical work by various scholars. His so-called "first" devotional revolution is more problematic. He writes (p. 104) of "the silence of the historical record" as "an intellectually liberating condition" which invites us to entertain alternatives to "the view that Irish popular Catholicism has its origins in far-off Celtic mists" so long as those alternatives accord with "the evidence that is available." The problem with this truism is that the evidence "available" to Carroll seems mostly limited to that presented in the secondary literature. Original research on early modern Ireland is both tedious and linguistically demanding, but its practitioners can be relied upon to tell us how consistent Carroll's hypothesis is with the evidence available to them. Nevertheless, Carroll's argument is elegant, provocative, and well worth the attention of historians. After presenting his "Summary and Conclusion" at the end of the penultimate chapter, he adds another chapter entitled "The Psychology of Pre-Famine Catholicism" preceded by a warning that readers "for whom a good cigar is.... never anything more than a good cigar" may prefer not to read it--an admonition Any formal verbal statement made during a trial by a judge to advise and caution the jury on their duty as jurors, on the admissibility or nonadmissibility of evidence, or on the purpose for which any evidence admitted may be considered by them. which no responsible reviewer could observe. The earlier argument focuses on one specific, and undoubtedly very important, form of popular devotion: the pilgrimage to a holy well which the pilgrim would circumambulate clockwise a specified number of times, often negotiating a rocky path on bare feet or knees. In the final chapter Carroll departs from his reliance on social structure to offer a Freudian explanation of these "rounding" rituals. It is an odd shift in the argument, which many readers, including this one, will find less convincing than the main lines of his theory. ENDNOTE See footnote. (1.) American Historical Review The American Historical Review (AHR) is the official publication of the American Historical Association (AHA), a body of academics, professors, teachers, students, historians, curators and others, founded in 1884 "for the promotion of historical studies, the 77 (3): 625-52. |
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