Devotion and Pilgrimage
Places of worship
Parish churches played an important role in the daily lives of people throughout their lifetime.
Places of worship and devotion are spread throughout populated regions. Parish churches played an important role in the daily lives of people throughout their lifetime; the church introducing new-borns to the community through baptism, staging adolescent ceremonies, such as confirmation, through to marriages and funerals. Most parish churches are surrounded by a cemetery, with the church used for services and prayers for the dead, for thanksgiving ceremonies and prayers to find solutions to the problems of daily life. All of these ceremonies relate to various donations and gifts to the church. The celebration of Mass is another important aspect of devotion. Some parish churches also became places of pilgrimage.
St. Jacob's Cathedral

1717–1732
Innsbruck, Tyrol, Austria
Architecture: Johann Jakob Herkomer (1648–1717), Johann Georg Fischer (1673–1747); stuccowork: Egid Quirin Asam (1692–1750); altar builder: Christoph Benedetti [n.d.], Theodor Benedetti [n.d.]; sculptor: Dominikus Molnig (1691–1761), Nikolaus Anton Moll (1676–1754); frescos: Cosmas Damian Asam (1686–1739); paintings: Josef Schöpf (1745–1822), J. G. Grasmair (1691–1751), Egid Schor (1627–1701)
An example of a parish church that also functioned as a pilgrimage church to the cultic image of St. Marys Aid (Cult of the Virgin Mary). This was the prototype for most late Tyrolean parish churches.