David Y. Neufeld
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‘Under the guise of Christian generosity’
Anabaptist responses to poverty in Reformed Zurich, 1600–1650
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This chapter charts the contours of a distinctive Swiss Anabaptist culture of charity in the rural territories of Reformed Zurich during the seventeenth century. In a context of unrelenting precariousness, parishes excluded dissenters from programmes of poor relief. Evidence from interrogation protocols and records of property confiscation reveals how, under conditions of repression, dissenters developed independent methods of addressing poverty in their midst. Anabaptist practices of material redistribution reflected prescriptions resident in congregational orders, embodying alternative readings of biblical demands regarding economic relations within the body of Christ. At the same time, Anabaptists’ social marginalisation and economic insecurity made them reliant on participation in a broad set of relationships and exchanges that traversed boundaries of religious difference. Integration in the rural economy of the majority not only tested the viability of Anabaptist mutual aid; it also rendered dissenters vulnerable to punitive financial mechanisms that Zurich’s authorities employed to reassert religious uniformity. Analysis of the city council’s campaign of repression against dissenters in the 1630s and 1640s demonstrates that authorities attempted to reincorporate Anabaptists into the social order through material coercion. The intentional impoverishment of the territory’s Anabaptists via dispossession rendered local nonconformists subject to strategies of discipline and reform that the government first developed to restore the Reformed poor to communal wholeness. While challenging the relegation of minority efforts to relieve poverty to an unofficial or non-institutional realm, this investigation reveals the limits that confessional politics placed on the development of divergent forms of charity in early modern Europe.

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Do good unto all

Charity and poor relief across Christian Europe, 1400–1800

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