Jenatsch's Axe
Social Boundaries, Identity, and Myth in the Era of the Thirty Years' War
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Published:15th Apr '16
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A richly documented investigation of a well-known figure in Swiss history who crossed diverse social and cultural boundaries in pre-modern Europe. During the turbulent events of Europe's Thirty Years' War, both ruthlessness and adaptability were crucial ingredients for success. In this engaging volume, Randolph C. Head traces the career of an extraordinarily adaptable and ruthless figure, George Jenatsch (1596-1639). Born a Protestant pastor's son, Jenatsch's career took him from the clergy to the military to the nobility. A passionate Calvinist in his youth, he converted to Catholicism and prudenceas his power grew. A native speaker of the Romansh language, he crossed the boundaries of language and local loyalty in his service to France, Venice, and his own people. Violence marked every turning point of his life. After fleeing the "Holy Massacre" of Protestants in the Valtellina in 1620, Jenatsch helped assassinate the powerful George Jenatsch in 1621, using an axe. He killed his commanding officer in a duel in 1629, and his own life ended in a tavern in 1639 when he was murdered -- with an axe -- by a man dressed as a bear. After his death, myth took over. Rumors spread that Jenatsch was killed by the same axe that he had wielded on von Planta -- and from therethe story only got better, culminating in Conrad Ferdinand Meyer's celebrated 1876 novel, Jurg Jenatsch. This study meticulously traces the social boundaries that characterized seventeenth-century Europe -- region, religion, social state, and kinship -- by analyzing a distinctive life that crossed them all. Professor Randolph C. Head teaches European History at the University of California, Riverside and is the author of Early Modern Democracy in the Grisons.
The book goes much further than simply popularizing the life of an early modern Swiss terrorist for the Anglo-American world. By thoroughly analyzing the cultural setting and thus telling Jenatsch's story a number of times and from different angles, it challenges long-accepted ideas about historical biography as a logical [and teleological] narrative with a climax at the end. It also underlines the fluidity of early modern confessional, political, and social boundaries. Furthermore, the book is a lively and entertaining read. -- Alexander Schunka * H-NET *
Head's writing is lively and engaging. . . Jenatsch's Axe demonstrates that sound historical scholarship can also be fun to read. * RENAISSANCE QUARTERLY *
With a deft combination of analytic skill and narrative power, Randolph Head brings Jenatsch and his world -- local, regional, and European -- vividly to life. Anyone, regardless of prior knowledge, who appreciates history written in terms of great and small, the universal and the local, will get great pleasure from reading this book. -- T. A. Brady, Professor of History, University of California, Berkeley
One thing is clear: George Jenatsch once again has a biography for these times. Randolph Head has succeeded with a masterwork: dense and textured, and with enormous narrative energy -- a book, that many a Jenatsch-ologist would have been happy to write. * NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG *
A biography that also confronts wider issues. . . fascinating. * AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW *
A lively and insightful discussion of the relationship between fact and fiction in historical writing and memory. * EUROPEAN HISTORY QUARTERLY, Vol. 41 No. 2 *
ISBN: 9781580465656
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
193 pages