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As the wealthiest German merchant family of the sixteenth
century, the Fuggers have attracted wide scholarly attention. In
contrast to the other famous merchant family of the period, the
Medici of Florence, however, no English-language work on them has
been available until now. "The Fuggers of Augsburg "offers a
concise and engaging overview that builds on the latest scholarly
literature and the author's own work on sixteenth-century merchant
capitalism. Mark Haberlein traces the history of the family from
the weaver Hans Fugger's immigration to the imperial city of
Augsburg in 1367 to the end of the Thirty Years' War in 1648.
Because the Fuggers' extensive business activities involved
long-distance trade, mining, state finance, and overseas ventures,
the family exemplifies the meanings of globalization at the
beginning of the modern age.
The book also covers the political, social, and cultural roles
of the Fuggers: their patronage of Renaissance artists, the
founding of the largest social housing project of its time, their
support of Catholicism in a city that largely turned Protestant
during the Reformation, and their rise from urban merchants to
imperial counts and feudal lords. Haberlein argues that the Fuggers
organized their social rise in a way that allowed them to be
merchants and feudal landholders, burghers and noblemen at the same
time. Their story therefore provides a window on social mobility,
cultural patronage, religion, and values during the Renaissance and
the Reformation.
The yearbook "Pietismus undNeuzeit" offers a wide
indterdisciplinary range of contributions to the history pf
pietism.
The clash of modernity and an Amish buggy might be the first image
that comes to one's mind when imagining Lancaster, Pennsylvania,
today. But in the early to mid-eighteenth century, Lancaster stood
apart as an active and religiously diverse, ethnically complex, and
bustling city. On the eve of the American Revolution, Lancaster's
population had risen to nearly three thousand inhabitants; it stood
as a center of commerce, industry, and trade. While the
German-speaking population-Anabaptists as well as German Lutherans,
Moravians, and German Calvinists-made up the majority, about
one-third were English-speaking Anglicans, Catholics,
Presbyterians, Quakers, Calvinists, and other Christian groups. A
small group of Jewish families also lived in Lancaster, though they
had no synagogue. Carefully mining historical records and
documents, from tax records to church membership rolls, Mark
Haberlein confirms that religion in Lancaster was neither on the
decline nor rapidly changing; rather, steady and deliberate growth
marked a diverse religious population.
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