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The Identity of Geneva: The Christian Commonwealth, 1564-1864 (Contributions to the Study of World History)
 
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The Identity of Geneva: The Christian Commonwealth, 1564-1864 (Contributions to the Study of World History) [Hardcover]

John B. Roney (Editor), Martin I. Klauber (Editor)

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Book Description

April 30, 1998 0313298688 978-0313298684
Although the initial effects of the Reformation in Geneva differed little from those in other free cities in early 16th century Europe, the movement was distinguished by the leadership of John Calvin, who offered a clear theological system and encouraged international connections through education, missions, and printing. By Calvin's death in 1564, Geneva's international reputation and leadership were at an all-time high. Calvin's theology, polity, and spirit would remain as the core of Genevan identity. However, in the early 19th century, the Catholic population would outnumber the Protestant, and Geneva could no longer claim to offer international, Calvinist leadership or even religious solidarity. This volume contains essays on selected aspects of Genevan identity from the mid-16th to the mid-19th century. It begins with the origins of the image of Geneva, follows the city from the time of Calvin's death, and concludes with the transformation in Genevan identity that would accompany its demographic shifts. From its time as a Protestant republic in which Genevans envisioned themselves as a new community of God's chosen people who found mutual support in religious, political, and social enterprises, Geneva would come to follow a new model of political unity based on a broader Christian foundation, which would respect plurality and international cooperation.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Recommended for upper-division undergraduate and graduate students; faculty and researchers.”–Choice

“[T]his is a good book and an edifying read.”–Canadian Journal of History/Annales

“A thought-provoking work for all interested in the interactions of theology with culture.”–Religious Studies Review

“The volume makes a strong first step toward addressing the lack of English scholarship on the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries of Genevan history.”–Sixteenth Century Journal

“The cumulative effect of the essays is to portray the broader religious, intellectual, and political changes in Europe from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries by using Geneva as a case study. Given the paucity of works in English on Geneva after Calvin's death in 1564, this book is also a handy introduction to the history of a city whose identity is still evolving.”–Church History

“[T]his collection of essays is a good contribution to current scholarship in Genevan history.”–American Historical Review

“This is a well-planned and tightly organized project in which each of those who contribute has something useful to say.”–English Historical Review

About the Author

JOHN B. RONEY is Associate Professor of History at Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Connecticut. He is the author of The Inside of History: Jean Henri Merle d'Aubigne and Romantic Historiography (Greenwood, 1996).

MARTIN I. KLAUBER is an instructor in History and Religious Studies at Barat College and a Visiting Professor of Church History at the Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, Illinois. He is the author of Between Reformed Scholasticism and Pan-Protestantism: Jean Alphonse Turretin (1671-1737) and Enlightened Orthodoxy at the Academy of Geneva (1994), and co-editor, with Michael Bauman, of Historians of the Christian Tradition (1995).

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