- Gesellverein
The Gesellenvereine (usual translation Journeymen's Unions) were German
Roman Catholic societies set up in the nineteenth century. They were originated byAdolph Kolping , surnamed the Journeymen's Father ("Gesellenvater"). They had for aims the religious, moral, and professional improvement of young men.Foundation
In 1849 Kolping was appointed assistant-priest at the
Cologne Cathedral . With friends, ecclesiastics and laymen, he founded a "Gesellenverein", and began free instruction through it. The Cologne society soon acquired its own home, and opened there a refuge, or hospice, for young travelling journeymen.Kolping was energetic and eloquent both as speaker and writer. He visited frequently the great industrial centres of Germany, Austria, Switzerland, and Hungary. In a short time societies of young Catholic journeymen were formed in many Rhenish towns, in Westphalia, and finally throughout the German-speaking world.
Movement
When Kolping died (4 December 1865), the Gesellenverein numbered about 400 branch unions. In 1901 they had reached the number of 1086, with a membership of 80,000 journeymen and 120,000 master-workmen. They existed in many other European countries, also.
Besides providing for Catholic doctrine, the societies conducted classes (book-keeping, arithmetic, drawing, literary composition, music, natural sciences, etc.) In the larger cities there were free classes in crafts. Instruction was designed especially for those workmen who aimed at establishing a business of their own. The principal publication was the "Kolpingsblatt".
References
*KOLPING, Der Gesellenverein (Cologne, 1849);
*SCHÄFFER, Adolf Kolping, der Gesellenvater (3d ed., Paderborn, 1894);
*WENZEL, Kolping der Gesellenvater (Berlin, 1896);
*SCHWEITZER, Der Kath. Gesellenverein Handbuch (Cologne, 1905); Der Kath. Gesellenv. in s. sozialen Bedeutung (Cologne, 1907).
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.