Elizabeth Tingle
Search for other papers by Elizabeth Tingle in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
The pilgrim as temporary pauper
The changing landscape of hospitality on the Camino de Santiago, 1550–1750
Abstract only
Log-in for full text

Pilgrimage was one of the most enduring devotional activities of pre-modern Catholic Christianity. Pilgrims, particularly those travelling to distant shrines, voluntarily took on the identity of ‘pauper’ to imitate Christ and the apostles and to perform penitential good works. Long-distance pilgrimage across Europe declined in the mid-sixteenth century, as a result of the Protestant Reformation, war, and unrest throughout the continent, but it revived from c. 1575 onwards. Attitudes towards and institutions for pilgrims which transformed across the seventeenth century show us a great deal about the changing views of poverty and paupers themselves. In the Middle Ages, many towns had organised food, alms, and hostels for pilgrims. In these, paupers and pilgrims were often relieved together. As attitudes to poverty and especially vagrancy changed from the sixteenth century onwards, there was an increasing separation of the two: ‘false’ pilgrims, or beggars in disguise, were the subject of laws and punishment to separate the religious from the fraudster. At the same time, hostels and hospitals were increasingly given over to the poor and pilgrims were marginalised or excluded. Finally, from the later seventeenth century, pilgrims themselves were seen as errant, treated by an increasingly regulatory state as ‘masterless’ men and women; religious devotion, as with charity, was best kept at home. The motive of the pilgrim in becoming a temporary pauper, and the civic and religious institutions which relieved this distinctive traveller, are examined in this chapter, with particular reference to the Camino de Santiago through northern Italy, France, and Spain, 1550–1750.

  • Collapse
  • Expand

All of MUP's digital content including Open Access books and journals is now available on manchesterhive.

 

Do good unto all

Charity and poor relief across Christian Europe, 1400–1800

Metrics

All Time Past Year Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 380 152 8
Full Text Views 32 2 0
PDF Downloads 20 1 0