About This Book
This study traces the popular cults of three German female saints back to earlier regional goddess figures, arguing that localized veneration preserves pre-Christian Gau-deities. It maps the geographic limits of each cult, recounts legends and rituals, and reads folk memory as an informal archive of vanished cultic structures. The author examines how Roman and monastic Christianity transformed, militarized, or demonized formerly domestic and sacred female roles, and how hagiography reinterpreted native virtues into miracles and moral tests. Combining antiquarian observation, legend critique, and social-moral sketches, the book shows continuity and alteration in rural belief and the reconfiguration of female religious authority.
About the Author
You May Also Like
6 picks
"Five-Head" Creek; and Fish Drugging in the Pacific / 1901
by Louis Becke
"Pennsylvania Dutch," and other essays
by Phebe Earle Gibbons
"Sterminator Vesevo" (Vesuvius the great exterminator) / Diary of the Eruption of April 1906
by Matilde Serao
21 Jahre in Indien. Dritter Theil: Sumatra.
by Heinrich Breitenstein
21 Jahre in Indien. Erster Theil: Borneo.
by Heinrich Breitenstein
A Bakony (1. kötet)
by Károly Eötvös