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The Jesuits and the Monarchy - Catholic Reform and Political Authority in France (1590-1615) (Hardcover, New Ed)
Loot Price: R1,123
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The Jesuits and the Monarchy - Catholic Reform and Political Authority in France (1590-1615) (Hardcover, New Ed)
Series: Catholic Christendom, 1300-1700
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The first three decades of Bourbon rule in France coincided with a
period of violent fragmentation followed by rapid renewal within
the French Catholic community. In the early 1590s, when Henri IV -
Protestant head of the Bourbon house - acceded to the throne,
French Catholics were at war with each other as Leaguer and
Navarrist factions fought both militarily and ideologically for
control of Catholic France. However, by 1620 a partially reconciled
French church was in the process of defining a distinctive reform
movement as French Catholics, encouraged by their monarchs, sought
to assimilate aspects of the international Catholic reformation
with Gallican traditions to renew their church. By 1650 this French
Catholic church, and its distinctive reform movement forged in the
decades following the collapse of the Catholic League, had become
one of the most influential movements in European Catholicism. This
study reconsiders the forces behind these dramatic developments
within the French church through the re-examination of a classic
question in French history: Why was the Society of Jesus able to
integrate successfully into the French church in the opening
decades of the seventeenth-century, despite being expelled from
much of the kingdom in 1594 for its alleged role in the attempted
assassination of the king? The expulsion, recall and subsequent
integration of the Society into the French church offers a unique
window into the evolution of French Catholicism between 1590 and
1620. It provides new insight into how Henri IV re-established
royal authority in the French Catholic church following the
collapse of the Catholic League and how this development helped to
heal the rifts in French Catholicism wrought by the Leaguer
movement. It also explores in unprecedented detail how Henri played
an important role in channelling religious energy in his kingdom
towards forms of Catholic piety -exemplified by his new allies the
Jesuits - which became the foundation of
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