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Religion and persecution

journal contribution
posted on 2024-04-12, 05:28 authored by Umair KhalilUmair Khalil, L Panza
AbstractThis paper investigates the relationship between local religiosity and episodes of persecutions in Europe between 1100 and 1850. We introduce a novel proxy for measuring local religion: the cult of saints in early Western Christianity. Our findings show that cities with an established cult of a saint are 11% points more likely to engage in Jewish persecutions and witch trials. However, cities with more progressive gender norms, measured by the presence of a female saint cult, are less likely to persecute witches compared to male-only saint cities. Our baseline relationship persists after controlling for a range of city-level economic, geographic and institutional characteristics and after accounting for other major confounders. Suggestive evidence points towards two mechanisms behind the saints-persecution relationship: (i) changes in norms induced by longer exposure to Christianity; and (ii) proximity of religious groups due to congruence of religious festivities.

History

Journal

Journal of Economic Growth

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

1381-4338

eISSN

1573-7020

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

Springer (part of Springer Nature)

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