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Religion and the Early Modern State

Views from China, Russia, and the West

James D Tracy editor Marguerite Ragnow editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:16th Dec '10

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Religion and the Early Modern State cover

Thirteen 2005 essays show worldwide perspectives of how early modern governments attempted to regulate religious life.

These 2005 essays afford parallel views of England and Europe, Tsarist Russia, and Ming China, and show a spectrum of possibilities for what early modern governments tried to achieve by regulating religious life, and for how religious communities evolved in new directions, in keeping with or in spite of official injunctions.How did state power impinge on the religion of the ordinary person? This perennial issue has been sharpened as historians uncover the process of 'confessionalization' or 'acculturation', by which officials of state and Church collaborated in ambitious programs of Protestant or Catholic reform, intended to change the religious consciousness and the behaviour of ordinary men and women. In the belief that specialists in one area of the globe can learn from the questions posed by colleagues working in the same period in other regions, this 2005 volume sets the topic in a wider framework. Thirteen essays, grouped in themes affording parallel views of England and Europe, Tsarist Russia, and Ming China, show a spectrum of possibilities for what early modern governments tried to achieve by regulating religious life, and for how religious communities evolved in new directions, either in keeping with or in spite of official injunctions.

Review of the hardback: '… a very courageous book.' Journal of Ecclesiastical History

ISBN: 9780521172653

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm

Weight: 640g

436 pages