The Swiss reformation
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Swiss reformation
(New frontiers in history)
Manchester University Press, 2002
- : pbk
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Includes bibliographical references and index
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Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
ISBN 9780719051173
Description
The Swiss Reformation was a seminal event of the sixteenth century which created a Protestant culture whose influence spread across Europe from Transylvania to Scotland. Offers the first comprehensive study of the Swiss Reformation and argues that the movement must be understood in terms of the historical evolution of the Swiss Confederation, its unique and fluid structures, the legacy of the mercenary trade, the distinctive character of Swiss theology, the powerful influence of Renaissance humanism, and, most decisively, the roles played by the dominant figures, Huldrych Zwingli and Heinrich Bullinger. Marked by astounding creative energy, incendiary preaching, burning political passions, peasant revolts, and breath-taking scholarship, as well as by painful divisions, civil war, executions and dashed hopes, the story of the Swiss Reformation is told with extensive use of primary sources. Explores the narrative of events before turning to consider themes such as the radical opposition, church and community, daily life in the Confederation, cultural achievements and the Swiss place in the wider European Reformation world. -- .
Table of Contents
Table of contents Table of maps Acknowledgements Abbreviations Introduction 1. Peasants, priests and soldiers: The Swiss Confederation in the Late Middle Ages 2. Zwingli and Zurich 3. The spread of the Reformation 4. War and disaster 1529-1534 5. Consolidation and turmoil 1534-1566 6. The radical challenge 7. Church building 8. Church and society 9. International Zwinglianism 10. Culture of the Swiss Reformation Chronology Principal figures Further reading Index
- Volume
-
: pbk ISBN 9780719051180
Description
The Swiss Reformation was a seminal event of the sixteenth century which created a Protestant culture whose influence spread across Europe from Transylvania to Scotland. Offers the first comprehensive study of the Swiss Reformation and argues that the movement must be understood in terms of the historical evolution of the Swiss Confederation, its unique and fluid structures, the legacy of the mercenary trade, the distinctive character of Swiss theology, the powerful influence of Renaissance humanism, and, most decisively, the roles played by the dominant figures, Huldrych Zwingli and Heinrich Bullinger. Marked by astounding creative energy, incendiary preaching, burning political passions, peasant revolts, and breath-taking scholarship, as well as by painful divisions, civil war, executions and dashed hopes, the story of the Swiss Reformation is told with extensive use of primary sources. Explores the narrative of events before turning to consider themes such as the radical opposition, church and community, daily life in the Confederation, cultural achievements and the Swiss place in the wider European Reformation world. -- .
Table of Contents
Table of contents
Table of maps
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
1. Peasants, priests and soldiers: The Swiss Confederation in the Late Middle Ages
2. Zwingli and Zurich
3. The spread of the Reformation
4. War and disaster 1529-1534
5. Consolidation and turmoil 1534-1566
6. The radical challenge
7. Church building
8. Church and society
9. International Zwinglianism
10. Culture of the Swiss Reformation
Chronology
Principal figures
Further reading
Index -- .
by "Nielsen BookData"