
audiobook
A fervent voice from the tumult of 1848 rises to challenge the entrenched power of the Roman Catholic hierarchy. Written by one of the founding members of a German writers’ association, the work blends personal memoir with sharp political commentary, recalling the uproar over the alleged relic‑pilgrimage to Trier and the broader struggle against censorship and despotism. Its opening frames a clash between an awakening public spirit and the ancient dogmas that the author sees as shackles on freedom.
Drawing on meticulous archival research and the writings of church fathers, the author pulls back the curtain on the rituals, relics and rhetoric that sustained religious fanaticism. With a tone that is both scholarly and impassioned, the book seeks to arm listeners with historical examples of oppression, urging them to question the sources of faith that have long been taken for granted. The narrative invites anyone curious about 19th‑century reform movements to hear a compelling case for intellectual emancipation.
Full title
Der Pfaffenspiegel Historische Denkmale des Fanatismus in der römisch-katholischen Kirche Historische Denkmale des Fanatismus in der römisch-katholischen Kirche
Language
de
Duration
~13 hours (789K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2010-12-05
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1812–1886
A restless 19th-century journalist and political writer, he turned military experience, revolution, and exile into vivid books with a sharp, argumentative edge. He is especially remembered for anticlerical writing and for throwing himself directly into the upheavals of 1848–49.
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