Responsibility and Emotions: Parental, Governmental and Almighty Responses to Infant Deaths in Denmark in the Mid-Eighteenth to the Mid-Nineteenth Century

Abstract

This chapter examines emotional responses to the death of unbaptized infants in Evangelical Lutheran Denmark. What kind of afterlife could be expected for such infants according to the church, and did the teachings of the church influence the emotional responses of parents? The memoirs of an eighteenth-century father, who lost nine of his eleven children, reveal a close connection between the writings of the early Lutheran church and the way he (two hundred years later) consoled himself while grieving for his children. He felt assured that God took responsibility for stillborn as well as unbaptized infants, so he did not fear for their salvation. However, a tension between this old Lutheran teaching and a simpler, magical understanding of the necessity of baptism for salvation is also present across the centuries, not only among peasants in the countryside, but also in nineteenth-century administrative practices, which saw stillborn and unbaptized infants as outcasts from Christian society.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TitelDeath, Emotion and Childhood in Premodern Europe
RedaktørerKatie Barclay, Kimberley Reynolds, Ciara Rawnsley
Antal sider18
UdgivelsesstedLondon
ForlagPalgrave Macmillan
Publikationsdato2016
Sider191-208
Kapitel10
ISBN (Trykt)978-1-137-57198-4
ISBN (Elektronisk)978 1 137-57199-1
StatusUdgivet - 2016
NavnPalgrave Studies in the History of Childhood
NummerSeries Editors: Laurence Brockliss & George Rousseau
Vol/bindhttp:/www.springer.com/series/14586

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