Religion, power, and politics in colonial St. Augustine

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219 pages 2001

About This Book

"This book offers a lively analysis of the religious world of colonial St. Augustine, Florida, focusing on the daily rituals that defined a Catholic life, as well as on the conflicts between religious and political leaders that defined and shaped the city's social milieu.".

"From 1680 to 1763 the small outpost on the edge of the Spanish frontier underwent dramatic changes. Working in both Florida and Spain with documents that correct, amplify, and qualify previous work in the field, Robert Kapitzke describes the turbulent interactions between representatives of the church and the crown.

He examines inquisition cases, ecclesiastical asylum disputes, and jurisdictional battles between parish priests and their Franciscan counterparts that regularly threatened the ordered world of the colony. He also shows that, at the same time, the colonists' deeply rooted religious faith brought stability to their community, which faced destruction throughout its colonial history.".

"This work fills an important gap in Spanish American history by presenting, in vivid detail, the dynamic religious life of the principal settlement and capital of Florida."--BOOK JACKET.

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