On the district české reformance
Issue Date
2019-01Author
Pavera, Libor
Publisher
University of Maribor, Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Published Version
http://www.ff.um.si/dotAsset/77956.pdfRights
Copyright 2019, the Authors. All articles are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 4.0 International License (CC-BY-NC).
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Avtor v članku razmišlja o češki reformaciji, o njenih začetkih in sprejemanju reformacijskega
gibanja v češkem okolju (v zvezi s spremembo načinov razmišljanja,
v povezavi s spremembami v šolstvu, umetnosti, kulturi ipd.). Češko zgodovino
opazuje iz ptičje perspektive v smeri k sodobnosti in razkriva, kako izrazito sled je
češki tip reformacije pustil v češki zgodovini. Češko reformacijo spremlja vse od
dobe Karla IV. in prizadevanj tega češkega kralja in rimskega cesarja za drugačno
cerkev pa do 20. stoletja, ko se je spor glede dveh smeri religioznega čutenja v čeških
deželah prenesel v dialog med T. G. Masarykom in J. Pekářem ter njunimi
učenci in nasledniki; t. i. spor o smislu češke zgodovine ostaja nikoli dokončana
medgeneracijska diskusija in je lahko eden od odgovorov na določeno vrsto odnosa
češkega državljana do vere, religije in verskega čutenja. Avtor ugotavlja, da reformacija
niti v Evropi niti v deželi »češke krone« nikoli ni bila enotna.
The author of the text addresses the Czech Reformation, he reflects on the beginnings
of the reform movement in the Czech environment (referring to the change
of mindset concerning changes in education, art, culture, etc.). From a bird’s eye
view, the author looks at Czech history in its shift to modernity and reveals the
significant trail the Czech type of Reformation left behind in the history of Czech
lands. He is following Czech Reformation since the time of the Roman emperor,
Karel IV (Charles IV) with his efforts for a different Church to the 20th Century,
when the problem of Reformation manifested itself in a rather philosophical dispute
– concerning the two-armed religious trend in the history of Czech citizens.
T. G. Masaryk and J. Pekař participated in the dispute as well as their students and
followers of two different ideas. It is the so-called dispute about the meaning of
Czech history, which has not been resolved until today and there may be one of the
answers to the question about the type of relationship of a Czech citizen to faith,
the church (devotion) and the domineering religious feeling in general. The author
concludes that in Europe as well as in the Czech Republic the Reformation was
never a single stream.
ISSN
2385-8753Collections
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