Reordering Marriage and Society in Reformation Germany
This book examines the impact of the Protestant Reformation on both the ideal and practice of marriage in sixteenth-century Germany. Combining extensive archival work with a broad synthesis of scholarly research in legal, theological, and social history, it provides the most comprehensive evaluation to date of the Reformation's impact on marriage. The author compares Protestant reforming goals and achievements to those of contemporary Catholics. All sixteenth-century campaigns to restore 'traditional family values', he argues, must be viewed in the context of more gradual social transformations in private morality, public authority, and familial relations. The apparent innovations of the reformers - including the abolition of clerical celibacy and introduction of divorce - fade in comparison to their much greater adherence to the theological, legal and social traditions shared with their Catholic ancestors and contemporaries.
- Provides the most comprehensive account yet published of the impact of the Reformation on all aspects of marriage in early modern Germany
- Describes marriage in both theory (theological and legal) and practice in Reformation Germany
- Provides a useful synthesis of recent international research on marriage, the family, gender and sexuality, and theology
Product details
April 2005Paperback
9780521894180
336 pages
233 × 155 × 18 mm
0.466kg
17 b/w illus. 1 map 8 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- Part I. The Nature and Origins of Sixteenth-Century Marriage Reform:
- 1. Marriage reform and reformers
- 2. Marriage and the Church: the ideological reformation
- 3. Marriage and the state: the bureaucratic reformation
- Part II. The Social Impact of Sixteenth-Century Marriage Reform:
- 4. In loco parentis: public approval of private consent
- 5. 'Against the marriage devil': sexual discipline and marital stability
- 6. Conclusions.