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Publication details
Out of Germany : the pilgrim badges as a tool of communication, using the example of the badges of Wilsnack
Authors | |
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Year of publication | 2023 |
Type | Article in Periodical |
Magazine / Source | Graeco-Latina Brunensia |
MU Faculty or unit | |
Citation | |
Web | webová stránka článku časopisu |
Doi | http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/GLB2023-2-1 |
Keywords | lay piety; Catholicism; badges; pilgrimage; communication |
Description | Imagery still plays a crucial role in a world of various languages and dialects. However, during the Middle Ages, when the masses were illiterate and the outside world often unknown and incomprehensible, images and visuality created a safe and coherent support for those who witnessed it. Iconography as a mode of non-verbal communication was often used by the Church, but people communicated among themselves through images, too. One of the popular modes of visual communication in the Middle Ages were badges – small objects, usually made to be worn pinned to the front of clothing or hats, or suspended. The badges existed in both the religious and secular spheres of human life and were meant to communicate an individual's personal or business affiliations, religious beliefs or even jokes. The following paper focuses on the religious badges using the example of the pilgrim badges of Wilsnack. It analyses the levels on which these badges communicated not only visually, but also as indirect mediators of information, agents of private conversations with God and saints, and as tools of surprising unification of pilgrims during the times of Wilsnack controversy. |
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