The Malines Congresses were a series of Catholic Congresses held in Mechelen (French: Malines), Belgium, with the purpose of bringing together Catholics with leading roles in all walks of life, on the model of the German Katholikentage.[1] The first three, held in 1863, 1864 and 1867, had considerable cultural, social and political impact.[2] They lay at the foundation of the future development of a Catholic Party in Belgian politics,[3] as well as a nascent Social Catholicism.[4] The first congress saw the establishment of the Guild of Saint Thomas and Saint Luke, which shaped Belgian Gothic Revival architecture and art education.[5] The main organiser of the first three congresses was Édouard Ducpétiaux, who died in 1868.[6] They were hosted in Mechelen by the archbishop, Engelbert Sterckx, who died in December 1867,[4] although much of the practical management fell to Isidore-Joseph du Rousseaux, a teacher at the junior seminary where many of the sessions were held.[7]
Further congresses were held in 1891, 1909,[8] and 1936.
First Congress (1863)
editThe first Catholic Congress in Mechelen was held from 18 to 22 August 1863.[1] The main speakers invited were Cardinal Wiseman, who spoke on the condition of Catholics in England, and Charles de Montalembert, who spoke on the principle of religious liberty.[9]
Second Congress (1864)
editThe second congress was held from 29 August to 3 September 1864.[1] For the occasion, an exhibition of ecclesiastical art was organised in Mechelen through to the end of September.[10]
Third Congress (1867)
editThe third congress was held from 2 to 7 September 1867.[1] It led directly to the 1868 founding of a Federation of Belgian Catholic Workers' Associations (a precursor of the Confederation of Christian Trade Unions).[11]
Fourth Congress (1891)
editThe 1891 congress, held 8-12 September, followed the publication of Pope Leo XIII's encyclical on social issues, Rerum Novarum, discussion of which dominated proceedings.[12] There was a strong attempt from the political right to relativise or minimise the encyclical's impact and "correct" the leftwards tendency of the Social Congresses that had been held in Liège in 1886, 1887 and 1890.[13] Proceedings were published in 1892 under the title Assemblée générale des Catholiques de Belgique: session de 1891.[14] At the congress, Désiré-Joseph Mercier (the future cardinal) presented the work of the Higher Institute of Philosophy, founded in 1889.
Fifth Congress (1909)
editConcerned about the development of Christian Democracy and the generation of policy ideas outside political circles, the Catholic Party then in power insisted that the fifth congress be strictly apolitical.[15] It brought together Catholic trade unionists, catechists, sodalities, confraternities, women's organisations, educators, and representatives of agricultural co-operatives, who reported to one another on their membership and activities under the broad concept of Catholic Action and dedicated to Christ the King.[16] The fifth congress was later regarded as having been less dominated by political and intellectual elites than previous congresses had been.[17]
Sixth Congress (1936)
editThe papers delivered to the sixth congress, held in 1936, were published in French and in Dutch as an eight-volume series entitled Actes du VIe Congrès catholique de Malines and Verhandelingen van het VIe Katholiek Kongres van Mechelen respectively.
On 10 September, Georges Lemaître delivered an address on Catholic culture and exact science.[18]
Developments in higher education for women were discussed by Marie Haps.[19]
References
edit- ^ a b c d M. Defourny, Les Congrès Catholiques en Belgique (Leuven, 1908) On Internet Archive.
- ^ Jan Aart, Jan De Maeyer, Ward De Pril and Leo Kenis, "Church Reform and Modernity in Belgium", in The Dynamics of Religious Reform in Northern Europe, 1780-1920. II: The Churches, edited by Joris van Eijnatten and Paula Yates (Leuven, 2010), p. 112.
- ^ Stathis N. Kalyvas, The Rise of Christian Democracy in Europe (Cornell University Press, 1996), pp. 187-188.
- ^ a b Carl Strikwerda, "Malines Congress", Encyclopedia of Modern Christian Politics: L-Z, edited by Roy Palmer Domenico and Mark Y. Hanley (Greenwood Press, 2006), pp. 351-352.
- ^ Jan De Maeyer, "Pro Arte Christiana: Catholic Art Guilds, Gothic Revival and the Cultural Identity of the Rhine-Meuse Region", in Historism and Cultural Identity in the Rhine-Meuse Region, edited by Wolfgang Cortjaens and Tom Verschaffel (Leuven, 2008), pp. 161-162.
- ^ Edmond Rubbens, "Edouard Ducpétiaux et les Congrès Catholiques de Malines", Revue catholique des idées et des faits, vol. 6, no. 46 (4 February 1927), pp. 11-13. Online at Liège University Library.
- ^ A. Simon, "Rousseaux (Isidore-Joseph du)", Biographie Nationale de Belgique, vol. 30 (Brussels, 1958), 752.
- ^ Frans Van Cauwelaert, "Nabetrachting op 't congres te Mechelen", Dietsche Warande en Belfort (1909), pp. 330-337 (On dbnl.org)
- ^ "The Roman Catholic Congress at Malines". Empire. 16 Oct 1863.
- ^ William Henry James Weale (ed.), Catalogue des objets d'art religieux du Moyen-Age, de la Renaissance et des temps modernes exposés à l'Hôtel Liedekerke à Malines, septembre 1864 (2nd ed., Brussels, Charles Lelong, 1864) On Google Books.
- ^ Jan De Maeyer, "La Ligue Démocratique Belge et ses antécédents", in Histoire du mouvement ouvrier chrétien en Belgique, edited by Emmanuel Gerard and Paul Wynants, vol. 2 (Leuven, 1994), p. 20.
- ^ Katholicisme en Nieuwe Tijden, vol. 1 (Brussels, n.d.), pp. 24-26.
- ^ Jan De Maeyer, Les congrès catholiques en Belgique : un signe de contradiction ?, in Le Catholicisme en congrès (XIXe-XXe siècles), edited by Claude Langlois and Christian Sorrel (LARHRA: Laboratoire de recherche historique Rhône-Alpes, 2009), pp. 9-28.
- ^ Assemblée générale des Catholiques de Belgique: session de 1891 (Mechelen, 1892). Volumes 1-2 and volume 3 on Google Books.
- ^ Katholicisme en Nieuwe Tijden, vol. 1 (Brussels, n.d.), p. 27.
- ^ Katholicisme en Nieuwe Tijden, vol. 1 (Brussels, n.d.), pp. 28-29, 33.
- ^ Katholicisme en Nieuwe Tijden, vol. 1 (Brussels, n.d.), p. 32.
- ^ Georges Lemaître, "La culture catholique et les sciences positives", in Actes du VIe congrès catholique de Malines, vol. 5 (Brussels, 1937), pp. 65-70.
- ^ Marie Haps, "L'Enseigenment supérieur des jeunes filles. II. Hors de l'Université", Actes du VIe congrès catholique de Malines, vol. 5 (Brussels, [1937]), pp. 321-327.