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On Time, Punctuality, and Discipline in Early Modern Calvinism

On Time, Punctuality, and Discipline in Early Modern Calvinism

On Time, Punctuality, and Discipline in Early Modern Calvinism

Max Engammare , Swiss National Science Foundation Researcher
Karin Maag , Swiss National Science Foundation Researcher
September 2013
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Paperback
9781107661639

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    In On Time, Punctuality and Discipline in Early Modern Calvinism, Max Engammare explores how the sixteenth-century Protestant reformers of Geneva, France, London, and Bern internalized a new concept of time. Applying a moral and spiritual code to the course of the day, they regulated their relationship with time, which was, in essence, a new relationship with God. As Calvin constantly reminded his followers, God watches his faithful every minute. Come Judgement Day, the faithful in turn will have to account for each minute. Engammare argues that the inhabitants of Calvin's Geneva invented the new habit of being on time, a practice unknown in antiquity. It was also fundamentally different from notions of time in the monastic world of the medieval period and unknown to contemporaries such as Erasmus, Vives, the early Jesuits, Rabelais, Ronsard, or Montaigne. Engammare shows that punctuality did not proceed from technical innovation. Rather, punctuality was above all a spiritual, social, and disciplinary virtue.

    • Discipline of time
    • Calvin and early Calvinism
    • From day to year, Protestant calendars

    Product details

    September 2013
    Paperback
    9781107661639
    288 pages
    229 × 152 × 16 mm
    0.43kg
    15 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. John Calvin's personal time-management
    • 2. Church time and its civic setting
    • 3. Saving time and learning to be punctual
    • 4. The growth and decline of Huguenot calendars (mid-sixteenth to late-seventeenth centuries)
    • 5. Ronsard and Tyard versus Viret regarding time
    • 6. The daily pattern
    • Conclusion.
      Author
    • Max Engammare , Swiss National Science Foundation Researcher

      Max Engammare is a scholar of the Reformation and General Director of Editions Droz in Geneva. He is the author and editor of ten books, including an edition of the sermons of John Calvin and, with Nicole Gueunier, Sebastien Castellion, Les livres de Salomon.

    • Translator
    • Karin Maag , Swiss National Science Foundation Researcher