Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Anna Katharina Emmerich and the Impacts of Catholic Romanticism in 19th-Century Germany
View through CrossRef
As a result of a close relationship established between Romanticism and Catholicism in the struggle against modernity in the early 19th century, a significant number of mystical phenomena, especially involving visionary women, spread throughout Europe during the 19th century. The works of Anna Katharina Emmerick stand as one of the earliest and primary influencers in this regard. Her mystical visions were transcribed and published by a romantic intellectual who had converted to Catholicism in that same context: Clemens Brentano. However, despite inspiring various mystical phenomena in the Catholic milieu, Emmerich’s visions raised suspicion within the Catholic Church due to the presence of supposed pagan and superstitious elements from Brentano’s Romanticism in her descriptions. This suspicion has resulted in ongoing difficulty in advancing her canonization process. In light of this debate, this article discusses the impacts of the union between Romanticism and Catholicism in early 19th-century Germany. It focuses on the case of Anna Katharina Emmerich and Clemens Brentano.
Title: Anna Katharina Emmerich and the Impacts of Catholic Romanticism in 19th-Century Germany
Description:
As a result of a close relationship established between Romanticism and Catholicism in the struggle against modernity in the early 19th century, a significant number of mystical phenomena, especially involving visionary women, spread throughout Europe during the 19th century.
The works of Anna Katharina Emmerick stand as one of the earliest and primary influencers in this regard.
Her mystical visions were transcribed and published by a romantic intellectual who had converted to Catholicism in that same context: Clemens Brentano.
However, despite inspiring various mystical phenomena in the Catholic milieu, Emmerich’s visions raised suspicion within the Catholic Church due to the presence of supposed pagan and superstitious elements from Brentano’s Romanticism in her descriptions.
This suspicion has resulted in ongoing difficulty in advancing her canonization process.
In light of this debate, this article discusses the impacts of the union between Romanticism and Catholicism in early 19th-century Germany.
It focuses on the case of Anna Katharina Emmerich and Clemens Brentano.
Related Results
J. O. Emmerich : Study in community journalism
J. O. Emmerich : Study in community journalism
PURPOSE OF THIS STUDY: This study is concerned with an examination of Emmerich's approach to the social and economic problems of his community with a detailed look at a major edito...
Negative romanticism: an exploration of a sense of isolation in Yushij 's Afsaneh
Negative romanticism: an exploration of a sense of isolation in Yushij 's Afsaneh
From its beginning in the academic studies during the later nineteenth century, Romanticism has provoked ongoing debates over the nature of its definition. Nonetheless Morse Peckha...
Romanticism in Religious Art
Romanticism in Religious Art
“Romanticism” generally refers to a set of movements that solidified around the turn of the 19th century and continued to influence cultural production for decades. Romantic ideolo...
The Revolutionary Romanticisms of Mo Yan and Yan Lianke
The Revolutionary Romanticisms of Mo Yan and Yan Lianke
Abstract
Revolutionary romanticism has been one of the twentieth century’s most influential literary modes, particularly within the genealogy of socialist aesthetics...
NEĮVERTINTAS CARLO SCHMITTO PAŽIŪRŲ ASPEKTAS
NEĮVERTINTAS CARLO SCHMITTO PAŽIŪRŲ ASPEKTAS
The main concern of this paper is the analysis of political romanticism and political theology. Today „Politische Romantik“ is regarded as a work in the field of aesthetics or XIX ...
Catholicism, Apostasy and Politics in Late Eighteenth-Century England: The Case of Sir Thomas Gascoigne and Charles Howard, Earl of Surrey
Catholicism, Apostasy and Politics in Late Eighteenth-Century England: The Case of Sir Thomas Gascoigne and Charles Howard, Earl of Surrey
Apostasy among the English Catholic gentry in the late eighteenth century was not uncommon. In this period contemporary Catholic observers were concerned by what they perceived to ...
NATIONAL COLOURING IN ROMANTICISM ON THE EXAMPLE OF LITERARY-CRITICAL STUDIES BY K. ZHUSSIP
NATIONAL COLOURING IN ROMANTICISM ON THE EXAMPLE OF LITERARY-CRITICAL STUDIES BY K. ZHUSSIP
Nowadays, the study of Romanticism as a significant phenomenon in literary studies is mainly focused on the investigation of its development under the influence of national charact...
“Up against a Stone Wall”: Women, Power and the National Catholic Community Houses
“Up against a Stone Wall”: Women, Power and the National Catholic Community Houses
This article is about the rise and fall of the National Catholic Community Houses, institutions created by the National Catholic War Council (NCWC) and run by Catholic laywomen. It...

