Book contents
- Reformations Compared
- Reformations Compared
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Saxon Comparisons
- 2 Contrasting Outcomes in the Swiss Confederation
- 3 Austria and Bohemia
- 4 In the Shadow of the Crescent Moon
- 5 Beyond Toleration
- 6 Nordic Reformations Compared
- 7 The Reformations along the Southern Baltic Littoral
- 8 Reformations in the Low Countries
- 9 Tales of the Unexpected
- 10 British Reformations Compared
- 11 The Reception of the Protestant Reformation in the Iberian Peninsula
- 12 Italy and Its Reformations Reconsidered
- Index
- References
9 - Tales of the Unexpected
The Reformation in England and France
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2024
- Reformations Compared
- Reformations Compared
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Saxon Comparisons
- 2 Contrasting Outcomes in the Swiss Confederation
- 3 Austria and Bohemia
- 4 In the Shadow of the Crescent Moon
- 5 Beyond Toleration
- 6 Nordic Reformations Compared
- 7 The Reformations along the Southern Baltic Littoral
- 8 Reformations in the Low Countries
- 9 Tales of the Unexpected
- 10 British Reformations Compared
- 11 The Reception of the Protestant Reformation in the Iberian Peninsula
- 12 Italy and Its Reformations Reconsidered
- Index
- References
Summary
The diametrically opposed outcomes of the Reformation in England and France have led historians to presume that there were significant differences in their religious situations before the Reformation that help account for that ultimate divergence. This chapter argues that any such presumption is wide of the mark. Not only were the supposed ‘preconditions’ for the success of the Reformation in England (such as Renaissance humanism, anticlericalism and church-state tension) more evident in France, but the early diffusion of Reformation teachings was swifter and more widespread there as well. Although in the second quarter of the sixteenth century the Reformation received increasing royal support in England but not in France, that early progress was insecure and was briefly reversed. Decisive divergence between the two realms in this regard began only around 1560, and in each of them the outcome might still have been different under other circumstances. The ultimate outcomes reflected the interplay of political contingency with pre-existing differences not in religious experience but in political structures and political culture, which put the English monarchy in a position to impose its will upon the English nation, but left the French monarchy less able not only to impose change but also to suppress it.
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- Reformations ComparedReligious Transformations across Early Modern Europe, pp. 190 - 213Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024