Calvinist preaching and iconoclasm in the Netherlands, 1544-1569

Author(s)
    • Crew, Phyllis Mack
Bibliographic Information

Calvinist preaching and iconoclasm in the Netherlands, 1544-1569

Phyllis Mack Crew

(Cambridge studies in early modern history / edited by John Elliott, Olwen Hufton, and H.G. Koenigsberger)

Cambridge University Press, 1978

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Note

Bibliography: p. 197-212

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book is a study of the relationship between ideology and social behaviour. Professor Crew analyses the attitudes and characters of the Calvinist ministers who preached in the Netherlands in the mid-sixteenth century and their effect on the popular religious upheavals which occurred during the summer of 1566. The hedge-preaching and iconoclasm which erupted in the period before the Dutch Revolt have been the subject of considerable speculation among historians, who have have developed a variety of interpretations of these events. Professor Crew views the Troubles in the broader context of the international Calvinist movement and iconoclastic violence in France and England. She questions whether the Netherlands ministers were clearly and strongly Calvinist, whether they shared specific characteristics of personality, social status or education, and whether they were 'charismatic leaders' in the sense given to the term by Max Weber.

Table of Contents

  • 1. The troubles
  • 2. The ministers
  • 3. The reformed movement 1544-1565
  • 4. Exile
  • 5. The consciousness of the reformed clergy
  • 6. The ministers and the troubles.

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