Superconductivity is a macroscopic quantum phenomenon, in the sense that a macroscopic number of electrons form a pair condensate, that occupies a single ground state. The electrons in this state are phase-coherent, breaking global U(1)-symmetry, and spatial variations of the phase imply superflows that usually cost kinetic energy, resulting in a uniform and rigid phase. It would therefore be surprising if a more ordered state with a non-uniform phase existed. This thesis proposes that such a ground state can occur in the absence of external perturbations, deep inside the superconducting state, where a periodic pattern is spontaneously imprinted on the superconducting phase, breaking continuous translational invariance. The resulting phase ...