|
The Jesuits Law (''Jesuitengesetz'') of 4 July 1872 forbade the presence of Jesuit institutions on the soil of the new German state. It was part of a broader intensification of church-state rivalry that emerged in the final decades of the nineteenth century in much of Europe as nationalist sentiment flourished, and secular states took a more assertive role in the daily lives of individuals. Within Germany, sources generally identify the resulting church-state struggle as the "Kulturkampf" (literally ''"cultural struggle"'', though the German term is more far reaching than its English language equivalent).〔: ''Staat und Kirche''. C. H. Beck, München 1997.〕 ==Content, political context and consequences== The core focus of the "Kulturkampf" laws went back to the individual states that together comprised the newly unified Germany and which still, by Anglo-French standards, enjoyed considerable autonomy within it. Apart from the so-called Pulpit Law, the Jesuits Law was one of very few "Kulturkampf" legislative measures enacted at a national level. Some of the new laws of the 1870s, notably the Prussian School inspections law and civil registration requirements for marriages, births and deaths, triggered state-church confrontation only as a side-effect. Unlike these measures, the Jesuits Law was from the start part of a struggle against the Jesuits, who were seen as the spearhead of Ultramontanism. By acknowledging the supremacy of Papal authority, the Jesuits contested the secular authority of Germany's imperial chancellor, Otto von Bismarck. Contemporary context for the Jesuits Law came from pre-emptive public campaigning against it by Roman Catholic traditionalists and the Protestant churches. Within the national legislature (''Reichstag''), the majority liberal coalition strengthened the draft legislation proposed by The Chancellor. On 4 July 1871 the law, which concerned the Jesuits and their associated orders, was promulgated. It proscribed the activities of Jesuit and associated orders on German soil. It empowered the government to impose residency bans on individual members of those orders, at to expel foreign members from the country. The Jesuits Law created a strange political alliance: Chancellor Bismarck found himself supported by many Liberals in the national legislature (''Reichstag''). Despite the secular instincts of nineteenth century liberalism there were indeed several prominent liberals who opposed the Jesuits Law on 19 July 1872 when the Reichstag voted on it. Opponents included , Ludwig Bamberger and Eduard Lasker from the National Liberal Party. From the Progressive Party, , Moritz Wiggers, , , , , , , , , Julius von Kirchmann and voted against it.〔''Reichstagsprotokolle'', 1872, S.1149-1150.〕 They rejected the exceptionalism of the Jesuits Law, which constituted a massive discriminatory attack on the fundamental rights of a single group. A number of other liberals stayed away for the vote. Supporters of the Jesuits Law from the Progressive Party included , Albert Hänel and Eugen Richter. They were joined in the vote by the National Liberal assembly deputy, Karl Biedermann who had opposed the law till the last minute but then, after much agonizing, changed his mind. Nevertheless, the overwhelming majority of the National Liberals and most of the Progressives voted in support of the measure. Reichstag conservatives, alarmed to find themselves aligned with most of the liberals, were no doubt reassured by Bismarck's wry historical reference as he addressed the chamber, "We are not about to walk to Canossa, not physically, nor in spirit". One immediate result of The Law was the emigration of numerous Jesuits across the border into Limburg in the Netherlands and Belgium. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Jesuits Law (1872)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|