15 - Calvin’s role in church history
from Part IV - Calvin Today
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
Summary
John Calvin was born on July 10, 1509 in the small French town of Noyon about sixty miles north-east of Paris, and died on May 27, 1564 in Geneva, an independent city-state whose common interests increasingly lay with the major cities of Switzerland. Noyon would remain a fairly unimportant place, but the fact that Calvin was a Frenchman - originally Jean Cauvin by name - is integral to understanding his role in church history. This made him an outsider in Geneva, but paradoxically it was his achievement, far more than anyone else's, that promoted Geneva to a city of European stature. Most of Calvin's adult career was spent in Geneva, from 1536 to his death, with a break during 1538-41. Prior to his time, it was a place of modest size with scant claim to distinction. It had no university nor leading light of the new learning of Renaissance humanism, it housed no major industries or finance enterprise, it was home to no significant printing press and wielded little or no political or military clout. It was, however, a regional trade center and not far from routes carrying traffic of all kinds between northern and southern Europe.
It was the Reformation, formally accepted by the citizen assembly in 1536 before Calvin’s arrival, which would make Geneva internationally influential.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to John Calvin , pp. 277 - 288Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004