
Catholic Europe, 1592-1648 examines the processes of Catholic renewal from a unique perspective; rather than concentrating on the much studied heartlands of Catholic Europe, it focuses primarily on a series of societies on the European periphery and examines how Catholicism adapted to very different conditions in areas such as Ireland, Britain, the Netherlands, East-Central Europe, and the Balkans. In certain of these societies, such as Austria and Bohemia, the Catholic Reformation advanced alongside very rigorous processes of state coercion. In other Habsburg territories, most notably Royal Hungary, and in Poland, Catholic monarchs were forced to deploy less confrontational methods, which nevertheless enjoyed significant measures of success. On the Western fringe of the continent, Catholic renewal recorded its greatest advances in Ireland but even in the Netherlands it maintained a significant body of adherents, despite considerable state hostility. In the Balkans, Ó hAnnracháin examines the manner in which the papacy invested substantially more resources and diplomatic efforts in pursuing military strategies against the Ottoman Empire than in supporting missionary and educational activity. The chronological focus of the book is also unusual because on the peripheries of Europe the timing of Catholic reform occurred differently. Catholic Europe, 1592-1648 begins with the pontificate of Clement VIII and, rather than treating religious renewal in the later sixteenth and seventeenth centuries as essentially a continuation of established patterns of reform, it argues for the need to understand the contingency of this process and its constant adaptation to contemporary events and preoccupations.
This book investigates how the process of Catholic renewal adapted to the diverse social and political conditions of Europe's peripheries between 1592 and 1648. Tadhg Ó hAnnracháin, a scholar of early modern European history, challenges the traditional focus on Catholic heartlands by examining the specific regional contingencies of the Counter-Reformation. He argues that religious reform was not a monolithic movement but a highly adaptive process that shifted according to local state coercion, diplomatic pressures, and geopolitical realities.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of the Counter-Reformation for its shift in geographic focus. Scholars frequently note the author's ability to synthesize complex regional histories into a coherent argument about the contingency of religious reform.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191057630
ISBN-13:
9780191057632
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