Question

Note to moderator: Read the answerline carefully. These people prevented illness with “secular” items featuring caricatured genitalia. A modern “Texts Society” published narratives by these people, like Felix Fabri, that inspired a mountainside replica in Varallo. Giacomo da Verona reported Nubian and Ethiopian kinds of these people in 1335, (-5[1])when Sancia (“SAHN-cha”) and Robert of Naples bought the “Custody” for their care. Venice monopolized these people’s lucrative cotton-smuggling galleys. Nicholas of Cusa decried a fad that attracted these people to German towns like Wilsnack. Cologne’s bell foundries mass-produced pewter badges for these people, (10[1])who were granted plenary indulgences (10[1])by (10[1])Rome’s Jubilee of 1300 and were called “palmers” if they reached the Cenacle. (10[1])A chaste mystic (10[1])who imitated (-5[1])Saint Bridget as one of these people wrote the Book of Margery Kempe. (-5[1])For 10 points, (-5[2])itineraries guided (10[2])what people (10[1])to (10[1])the (10[1])Via (10[4])Dolorosa’s (10[3])shrines? (10[3])■END■ (10[4])

ANSWER: pilgrims [or word forms of pilgrimage, peregrinus, peregrinatio, or pilgrim galleys; accept palmers until read; prompt on tourists, travelers, journeyers, wayfarers, iter or equivalents; prompt on Orthodox Christians, Catholics, Copts, penitents, devotees, devout or similar answers; prompt on Franciscans, Friars Minor, mendicants, or Spiritual Franciscans by asking “who were the main people overseen by their Custody?”] (Clues include the Palestine Pilgrims’ Text Society, sacri monti, Mount Zion’s “Franciscan Custody” negotiated from the Mamluk sultan al-Nāṣir Muḥammad, and German shrines of the blood cult.)
<European History>
= Average correct buzz position