Lex

Browse

GenresShelvesPremiumBlog

Company

AboutJobsPartnersAffiliates

Resources

DocsInvite FriendsSupport

Legal

Terms of ServicePrivacy Policygeneral@lex-books.com(215) 703-8277

© 2026 LexBooks, Inc. All rights reserved.

Les Comédiens Hors La Loi

Les Comédiens Hors La Loi

Gaston Maugras

1887

History - Ancient, History - Early Modern (c. 1450-1750), History - European, History - Medieval/Middle Ages, History - Modern (1750+), History - Religious

A historical account written in the late 19th century. It investigates why actors were long treated as socially and religiously suspect, tracing their status from sacred ritual origins through Roman infamy, Christian condemnation, medieval liturgy, and modern rehabilitation. Drawing on councils, laws, and vivid episodes, it clarifies how prejudice formed, persisted, and waned. This study will appeal to readers interested in theater history, church–state relations, and shifting cultural norms. The opening of the work frames the subject with the 1884 Saint‑Roch mass honoring Corneille, contrasted with the punishment of a Paris curé for a similar service in 1763, and cites a lively press debate to show how misunderstood the Church’s treatment of actors remains. The author sets out his plan to survey actors’ legal and religious status from Greece and Rome through the Middle Ages to the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, listing key sources. He first shows the stage arising from religious rites—honored in Greece—then becoming infamous at Rome as performances passed to slaves and to mass entertainments of the circus, mimes, and pantomimes, despite their continuing pagan-sacral character and imperial favor. He then explains the early Church’s rationale for condemning spectacles and denying sacraments to performers unless they quit the stage, notes emperors’ mixed measures (including Justinian’s permission for converts to leave the profession), and describes the decline of theaters in the West under barbarian invasions while they endured in the East. Finally, the narrative sketches the medieval revival of drama within churches—liturgical plays for major feasts alongside the unruly Feast of Fools—before the excerpt breaks off.

Project Gutenberg

A historical account written in the late 19th century. It investigates why actors were long treated as socially and reli...

Goodreads

X-Ray

Les Comédiens Hors La Loi
Les Comédiens Hors La Loi
Project Gutenberg · 477 pages (French)
EPUB

More books from this author

right arrow
La Cour De Lunéville Au Xviiie Siècleles Marquises De Boufflers Et Du Châtelet, Voltaire, Devau, Saint-Lambert, Etc.
Dernières Années De La Cour De Lunévillemme De Boufflers, Ses Enfants Et Ses Amis

La MarquiseDe BoufflersEt Son Fils,Le Cheval...

Gaston Maugras

Shelves with this book

right arrow
Pride and Prejudice
Moby Dick; Or, the Whale
Frankenstein; Or, the Modern Prometheus

AI Indexed

1000 books