The Ludus de Antichristo (Play About the Antichrist) is a liturgical-oriented drama from the 12th century whose original author is unknown. Its origins are almost certainly from southern Germany, likely a product of the Benedictine monastery in Tegernsee, Bavaria—as the manuscript that contains the play was kept at the monastery. Most likely the play was written c. 1160 as much of the thematic material corresponds closely to events occurring during the reign of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa I and his troubles with Pope Alexander III. A roughly seventy-line fragment of the play is also extant in a thirteenth-century Gospel text from the St. Georgenberg Abbey in modern-day Fiecht, Austria—suggesting a link between the two monastic communities.[1] Overall, the play is a critique of reform efforts instituted by the Papacy in the twelfth century that would potentially weaken monastic self-rule in favor of a more centralized Papal control over Christian instruction and education, specifically centered on the growth of cathedral schools. The monastery at Tegernsee had enjoyed suzerainty from Papal oversight since the tenth century—answering directly to the Holy Roman Emperor—and sought employ a propaganda effort amongst the many Benedictine communities in Bavaria and Austria in the form of a dramatic interpretation of eschatological events that were supportive of the Emperor as God's instrument in bringing about the final events Christian narrative, rather than those efforts of the Papacy (although the Emperor does actually submit to the Antichrist after fighting him in the first place).[2] The long-standing designation of the play as a "liturgical" (dating back to the nineteenth century) is a result of the inclusion of several well-known liturgies popular amongst Benedictine monastic communities. But these liturgies reflect an "insider's knowledge" of their traditional means of performance, altering the reception of changes made by the author of the play so that the propagandistic messages are codified specifically for the monastic communities that surround Tegernsee. The drama warned its audience of the dangers posed by the Antichrist, a prophesied figure of evil whose coming (according to the Old and New Testaments) was an indication that the end of the world, or apocalypse, was near.

References

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  1. ^ Thomas, Kyle A. (2018). "The Medieval Space: Early Medieval Documents as Stages". Theatre Survey. 59 (1): 4–22. doi:10.1017/S0040557417000461. S2CID 165971708.
  2. ^ Thomas, Kyle A. "The "Ludus de Antichristo": Playing Power in the Medieval Public Sphere" (PDF). www.ideals.illinois.edu. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 September 2016. Retrieved 17 August 2025.
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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

The Preaching of the Antichrist

scene. Rynck, Patrick de: Luca Signorelli, "El sermón y las obras del Anticristo", pp. 102–103 in Cómo leer la pintura, 2005, Grupo Editorial Random House

Gate of Europe

García, Yago (20 October 2015). "'El día de la Bestia': 20 años con el Anticristo". Cinemanía (in Spanish). Retrieved 5 February 2017. Wikimedia Commons

Nunsploitation

in the Convents of Italy: Chicago: University of Chicago Press: 2010. Anticristo: The Bible of Naughty Nun Sinema and Culture: Guildford: FAB: 2000: ISBN 1-903254-03-5

Santiago Segura

García, Yago (20 October 2015). "'El día de la Bestia': 20 años con el Anticristo". Cinemanía (in Spanish). El Mundo. Retrieved 13 September 2018. Galán

Yiye Ávila

Biography; spiritual Editorial Unilit Spanish, ISBN 1-56063-434-0 El Anticristo (The Antichrist) Antichrist (biblical teaching); the Great Tribulation

Magnum in parvo: A philosophy in compendium

http://www.nietzschesource.org/#eKGWB/NF-1888,19 Nietzsche, F. (1997). El Anticristo. Traducción, introducción y notas de Andrés Sánchez Pascual. Madrid: Alianza

Antichrist (virus hoax)

"Antichrist", or Anticristo, was a Spanish-language computer virus hoax distributed via email in 2001. The email was detected by Symantec, who is the owner

Manga de Dokuha

el manga" (in Spanish). Herder Editorial. Retrieved 22 March 2015. "El anticristo" (in Spanish). Herder Editorial. Retrieved March 22, 2015. "Analectas"