دانلود کتاب Urban encounters and the religious divide: Catholic-Protestant coexistence in Saumur, France, 1589–1665
by Scott Mitchel Marr
|
عنوان فارسی: شهری برخورد و مذهبی تقسیم: کاتولیک-پروتستان همزیستی در سومور فرانسه 1589-1665 |
دانلود کتاب
جزییات کتاب
Saumur had fleeting associations with Reformed Protestantism in the sixteenth century, but a permanent Huguenot community did not develop until 1589, when Philippe Duplessis-Mornay was named governor. A devout Huguenot as well as an advocate of religious peace, Duplessis-Mornay made Saumur a vibrant center of Protestant activity in western France, building a temple and establishing an Academy that attracted scholars from across Calvinist Europe. Catholic citizens, unwilling to concede the city's confessional identity, invited Counter-Reformation religious orders into the city to check the advance of Protestantism. Wary of the potential for violence, Duplessis-Mornay exhorted townspeople to join together to preserve public order. The city's defense, the administration of justice, the obligation to act as a good neighbor—these dimensions of civic culture applied to Catholics and Huguenots equally and did not demand uniformity of belief.
This dissertation also considers what religious coexistence looked like in the everyday lives of Saumur's inhabitants. Notarial documents from the city show Catholics and Protestants interacting in their neighborhoods and at city assemblies and guild meetings. Inter-faith relations also had an economic dimension, and townspeople regularly crossed confessional boundaries to lend and borrow money and for commercial and real estate transactions. Catholics and Huguenots remained sensitive to religious differences, however, and decisions regarding marriage and apprenticeship were made with an eye toward confessional compatibility. Urban society fostered coexistence in daily life, but Saumur's Catholic and Protestant inhabitants were vigilant in preserving religious unity within their households.