No rasto da guerra

At the end of the 14th century Lisbon experienced days of great anxiety and suffering, due to the wars in which Portugal was involved with Castile, exacerbated by the fact that its already preeminent place in the realm. Convinced that the misfortunes that befell them were divine punishment for the s...

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Main Author: Iria Gonçalves
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Instituto de Estudos Medievais 2023-07-01
Series:Medievalista
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/medievalista/6876
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author Iria Gonçalves
author_facet Iria Gonçalves
author_sort Iria Gonçalves
collection DOAJ
description At the end of the 14th century Lisbon experienced days of great anxiety and suffering, due to the wars in which Portugal was involved with Castile, exacerbated by the fact that its already preeminent place in the realm. Convinced that the misfortunes that befell them were divine punishment for the sins committed, the "honourable" citizens of Lisbon listed the most nefarious of those sins, proscribed and punished with pecuniary penalties and a great series of religious ceremonies was planned in their favour. The outcome of the battle of Aljubarrota, proving that God had heard their prayers, led them, as sign of gratitude, to increased the actions of praise previously determined with promises of amendment.
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institution Kabale University
issn 1646-740X
language deu
publishDate 2023-07-01
publisher Instituto de Estudos Medievais
record_format Article
series Medievalista
spelling doaj-art-5c1cae4c182b4787a6dd8374133bbcb72025-01-30T10:53:08ZdeuInstituto de Estudos MedievaisMedievalista1646-740X2023-07-013410.4000/medievalista.6876No rasto da guerraIria GonçalvesAt the end of the 14th century Lisbon experienced days of great anxiety and suffering, due to the wars in which Portugal was involved with Castile, exacerbated by the fact that its already preeminent place in the realm. Convinced that the misfortunes that befell them were divine punishment for the sins committed, the "honourable" citizens of Lisbon listed the most nefarious of those sins, proscribed and punished with pecuniary penalties and a great series of religious ceremonies was planned in their favour. The outcome of the battle of Aljubarrota, proving that God had heard their prayers, led them, as sign of gratitude, to increased the actions of praise previously determined with promises of amendment.https://journals.openedition.org/medievalista/6876Lisbonpublic sinsfearanguishsiege
spellingShingle Iria Gonçalves
No rasto da guerra
Medievalista
Lisbon
public sins
fear
anguish
siege
title No rasto da guerra
title_full No rasto da guerra
title_fullStr No rasto da guerra
title_full_unstemmed No rasto da guerra
title_short No rasto da guerra
title_sort no rasto da guerra
topic Lisbon
public sins
fear
anguish
siege
url https://journals.openedition.org/medievalista/6876
work_keys_str_mv AT iriagoncalves norastodaguerra