Calvin was born on July 10, 1509, in Picardy in northern France, farm country marked by strong religious and ecclesiastical ties. His birthplace, Noyon, along with Amiens, Beauvais, Laon, and Senlis, belonged to the cathedral cities of this province, rich in tradition, which also possessed important abbeys such as Corbie and Péronne. The Picards made up one of the four recognized “nations” among the students of the University of Paris, and Calvin was proud throughout his life to belong to this elite. Even his character largely matched the “Picardian”: intelligent, logical, sensibly diligent, morally serious, and devoted to freedom and order - as well as overly sensitive, self-confident, and irritable. At the time of his birth, both a religiosity bordering on mysticism and a growing openness to humanist ideas were determining the spiritual climate of the land.
Calvin’s father was a financial administrator of the cathedral chapter
of Noyon. His mother, who died early, was a truly humble woman about
whom little is known other than her zeal for pilgrimages. Calvin had four
brothers and two sisters, most of whom are later found in the reform camp.
Calvin admired his somewhat authoritarian father and profited from this
aspiring man who tried to raise himself from a humble background to moving
in educated circles, even that of the elegant family of de Hangest-Genlis.
According to his father’s wishes, John was intended to become a priest. His
studies were financed by generous ecclesiastical benefices that soon made
it possible for him to enjoy instruction in famous Parisian schools.