Andreas Oxner

Anderl (Andreas) Oxner von Rinn, also known as Andreas Oxner, (c. 1459 – 12 July 1462) is a folk saint of the Roman Catholic Church. A later writer alleged that the three-year-old boy had been ritually murdered by the Jews in the village of Rinn (Northern Tyrol, currently part of Austria).

Andreas Oxner
Child of Judenstein
BornAnderl Oxner von Rinn
c. 1459
Austria
Died12 July 1462 (aged 3)
Rinn, Austria
Venerated inFolk Catholicism
Beatified1752 by Pope Benedict XIV
Major shrineJudenstein
ControversyBlood libel
Catholic cult suppressed
1994 by Reinhold Stecher

Initial accusations

Andrew was the child of day laborers Simon and Maria Oxner. After his father's death, the mother entrusted the child to his uncle Johann Meyer, an innkeeper. On 12 July 1462, Andrew disappeared, and his mother found his body hanging from a tree in a nearby forest. The uncle claimed he had sold the child to Jews returning from a fair. The child's body was buried in a cemetery of Ampass without any investigation.[1]

In 1619, Hyppolyte Guarinoni heard a story about a little boy buried in Rinn who had been murdered by Jews, and allegedly dreamt that his year of death was 1462. Celebrations of the cult began in 1621 and, by the late 17th century, they occurred in all the Tyrol region.[2]

Around 1677–85, the inhabitants of Rinn solemnly transferred Andrew's body to Rinn, imitating the cult of Simon of Trent. In 1722 a commemoration mass was first celebrated in his honour.

The alleged scene of the crime, known as the "Judenstein" (or Jews' Stone),[3] became a place of pilgrimage and locus of antisemitism in the Catholic Church.

Tale

The tale of the Anderl's ritual murder, known as Der Judenstein (The Jews' Stone), is largely part of a Tyrolian oral tradition and only a few written versions exist.[2] It was recorded by the Grimm Brothers in Deutsche Sagen (1816/1818).[4]

In the year 1462 in the village of Rinn in Tyrol a number of Jews convinced a poor farmer to surrender his small child to them in return for a large sum of money. They took the child out into the woods, where, on a large stone, they martyred it to death in the most unspeakable manner. From that time the stone has been called the Jews' Stone. Afterward they hung the mutilated body on a birch tree not far from a bridge.

The child's mother was working in a field when the murder took place. She suddenly thought of her child, and without knowing why, she was overcome with fear. Meanwhile, three drops of fresh blood fell onto her hand, one after the other. Filled with terror she rushed home and asked for her child. Her husband brought her inside and confessed what he had done. He was about to show her the money that would free them from poverty, but it had turned into leaves. Then the father became mad and died from sorrow, but the mother went out and sought her child. She found it hanging from the tree and, with hot tears, took it down and carried it to the church at Rinn. It is lying there to this day, and the people look on it as a holy child. They also brought the Jews' Stone there.

According to legend a shepherd cut down the birch tree, from which the child had hung, but when he attempted to carry it home he broke his leg and died from the injury.

Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, Deutsche Sagen (1816/1818), no. 353. Trans. D. L. Ashliman, 2005.

Veneration

In 1752, Pope Benedict XIV beatified Anderl, but in 1755 refused to canonize him and stated that the Roman Church did not formally venerate him.[5]

Popular theatrical performances based on the writings of Guarinoni were performed until 1954 and facilitated the spread of the blood libel legend. The Brothers Grimm revived the tale in 1816 when they published the first volume of their German legends. In 1893, a book appeared, Four Tyrolian Child Victims of Hassidic Fanaticism by Viennese priest Josef Deckert.

The cult of Anderl von Rinn persisted in Austria until the 1990s. In 1985, Bishop of Innsbruck Reinhold Stecher ordered the body transferred from the church to the churchyard of Judenstein, and forbade his cult in 1994. Some ultra-conservative Christians still make a procession to his grave every year.[2]

gollark: Yes, just make an optimizing BF interpreter thing on an FPGA.
gollark: The first one might be slow, I think FPGAs take a while to reprogram?
gollark: I mean, either works, but I was thinking an on-FPGA interpreter.
gollark: Yes, that.
gollark: Well, first, you sacrifice your soul to Ba'hawejodfp, god of hardware design languages and books over 700 pages (gods nowadays have to take on multiple jobs to remain relevant).

See also

See also the articles of other children whose deaths in medieval times gave rise to the persecution of the Jews:

References

  1. "ANDREW OF RINN, BL.". New Catholic Encyclopedia. 1 (2nd ed.). 2003. p. 406.
  2. Halsall, Paul (1997). "Medieval Sourcebook: A Blood Libel Cult: Anderl von Rinn, d. 1462". Internet History Sourcebooks Project - Fordham University (published 1999).
  3. Medieval Sourcebook: A Blood Libel Cult: Anderl von Rinn, d. 1462 www.fordham.edu.
  4. Ashliman, D. L. (2005). "Anti-Semitic Legends". University of Pittsburgh.
  5. "ANDREW OF RINN". Encyclopaedia Judaica. 2 (2nd ed.). 2007. p. 144.

Further reading

  • Rainer Erb: Es hat nie einen jüdischen Ritualmord gegeben. Konflikte um die Abschaffung der Verehrung des Andreas von Rinn. Wien 1989.
  • Bernhard Fresacher: Anderl von Rinn. Ritualmordkult und Neuorientierung in Judenstein 1945–1995. Innsbruck und Wien 1998. ISBN 3-7022-2125-5
  • Andreas Maislinger und Günther Pallaver: « Antisemitismus ohne Juden - Das Beispiel Tirol ». In: Wolfgang Plat (Hg.), Voll Leben und voll Tod ist diese Erde. Bilder aus der Geschichte der Jüdischen Österreicher. Herold Verlag, Wien 1988. ISBN 3-7008-0378-8
  • Ingrid Strobl: Anna und das Anderle. Eine Recherche. Frankfurt am Main 1995. ISBN 3-596-22382-2
  • Richard Utz: "Remembering Ritual Murder: The Anti-Semitic Blood Accusation Narrative in Medieval and Contemporary Cultural Memory." In Genre and Ritual: The Cultural Heritage of Medieval Rituals. Ed. Eyolf Østrem. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press/University of Copenhagen, 2005. Pp. 145–62.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.