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Public Functions The earliest Chambers were closely associated with the church. Many of the societies had priests on their membership rolls. The Chambers assisted with the observance of religious festivals. The societies' creative artists added lustre to processions and performed religious plays. |
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Local
government also sponsored public events that could
benefit from the assistance of skilled writer/performers.
Chambers were called upon by the local governments to
organize pageants, to entertain at receptions, to put on
plays or mimes on festive occasions. Cities were
regularly expected to stage triumphal entries or street
shows to celebrate the visit of noblemen. All important
guilds in a city contributed to these civic displays.
Since creative arts were the special concern of the
Rederykers, civic organizers tended to depend on them
heavily for help with public celebrations. A Chamber
might be expected, for instance, not only to create a
special show for a ruler's triumphal entry but to supply
ideas, speeches, and actors and singers for the shows
financed by the city or by other guilds.
Mutually beneficial financial arrangements between Chamber and city helped strengthen the secular orientation of the Rederijkers in opposition to their gradually weakening ties to their religious roots. Copyright
© 1997 Kelly S. Taylor |