Hesitant steps: acceptance of the Gregorian calendar in eighteenth-century Geneva.
McNutt, Jennifer Powell
History demonstrates that the calendar is a tool of far more
significance than simply a means to organize units of time. For Roman
high priests prior to the reign of Julius Caesar, the calendar was a
tool of power, symbolizing political supremacy over society through the
manipulation of time at will. (1) Under Pope Gregory XIII, the calendar
was a symbol of papal responsibility to ensure the proper worship of the
Catholic Church. In the case of European Protestants, the Julian
calendar was a symbol of religious identity and protest against Catholic
domination. Likewise, within revolutionary France, the Calendrier
Republicain symbolized the rejection of the Ancien Regime and
Catholicism. (2) These few examples are an indication that throughout
history in various times and places calendars have proven to represent
more to humanity than mere time reckoning methods. Consequently, one may
approach the study of the calendar as a means to grasp cultural and
religious identity within specific regional contexts.
This study will explore the introduction of the Gregorian calendar in 1582, the rejection of this calendar by sixteenth-century
Protestants, and its eventual modification and acceptance by
eighteenth-century Geneva. (3) The overall intention of this research is
to encourage further consideration of the reasons and events surrounding
the gradual incorporation of the calendar in particular regions more
than one hundred years after its initial introduction--a decisive point largely understudied by eighteenth-century cultural and regional
scholarship. (4) More specifically, the events surrounding the
acceptance of the Gregorian calendar will serve to shed light on
Geneva's sociopolitical transition from the Reformation to the age
of Enlightenment.
I. INTRODUCING THE WESTERN CALENDAR
The method of time reckoning incorporated by our Western civil
calendar is a synthesis of various traditions, including the Hellenistic
designation for the names of the months, the seven-day week of the Near
East--best seen in the Old Testament Genesis account of Creation-the
twenty-four-hour day observed by the Egyptians, and the Mesopotamian
division of hours by minutes and seconds. (5) Primarily, however, our
current calendar is a modification of the Julian calendar.
Due to the misuse of power by previous high priests, the Roman
calendar was rendered into a state of such extreme seasonal disorder
that when Julius Caesar sought its reform in 46 B.C.E., the variance
between the civil equinox and the astronomical equinox was calculated at
three months. (6) Consequently, the calendar introduced during his reign
was intended to correct the interval of time between the beginning of
the year and the vernal equinox, the beginning of spring. In order to
restore the vernal equinox to its perceived correct place on March 25,
the Julian calendar fixed the mean length of the year to 365.25 days,
mandating that every fourth year should consist of 366 days, while
otherwise 365 days. (7) In fact, the earth's tropical year--the
length of time that the sun, as observed from the earth, takes to return
to the same position along its ecliptic path--is slightly less than the
Julian calculation; it is closer to 365.2424 days, though this exact
calculation is debated among scholars. (8) As a result, the Julian
calculations rendered the year eleven minutes and fourteen seconds too
long, which accumulated to an error of approximately one day every 130
years, a calculation that is also disputed in scholarship. (9) Because
the vernal equinox provides the basis for calculating Easter, and the
dates of Pentecost and Lent are determined according to Easter's
estimation, this error had adverse effects on the religious calendar.
Consequently, the discrepancy between the ecclesiastical calendar and
the astronomical reality grew.
In 325 C.E., the Council of Nicaea settled a dispute between the
eastern and western Christian churches by establishing the vernal
equinox on March 21 and instructing that Easter should be uniformly
celebrated on the first Sunday on or after the fourteenth day of the
Paschal moon. (10) At the time, the Alexandrian church had created an
eight-year Easter canon that calculated the future dates for observing
Easter. However, careful observation of the Alexandrian cycle revealed
that the forthcoming celebrations of Easter were gradually drifting due
to the regression of the vernal equinox. The first recorded concern for
this predicament is found in a letter from Pope Leo I to Emperor
Marcianus on June 15, 453 C.E. (11) Indeed, by the sixteenth century,
the astronomical vernal equinox had shifted from the prescribed date of
the Nicaea Council by ten days, which acutely affected the seasonal
celebration of Easter.
Papal efforts to reform the augmenting error in the fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries had been commissioned without success, and the later
attempts by the Council of Trent had been impeded by the deaths of Popes
Pius IV and V. However, in 1577, after evaluating diverse mathematical
suggestions for amending the error, Pope Gregory XIII disseminated a
proposal for reform to expert mathematicians via Roman Catholic princes
entitled the Compendium novae rationis restituendi Kalendarium. (12) The
incentive for this reform was not primarily linked to righting
agricultural cycles and re-aligning the vernal equinox, though those
aspects were concerns. Indeed, as recent scholarship by Robert Poole, J.
D. North, and Michael Hoskin agrees, the main catalyst of concern was
ecclesiastical--to ensure that Easter was celebrated at the most
accurate time. (13) After much deliberation by the commission created to
oversee the alterations, on February 24, 1582, the task was completed,
and at the age of eighty, Gregory signed the bull reforming the
calendar.
In its finished form, the Gregorian calendar restored the vernal
equinox according to the Council of Nicaea's date: March 21.
Furthermore, the calendar introduced an altered leap year system that
dropped three leap years every 400 years--those not divisible by
400--while instituting the one-time elimination of ten days from October
5 to 14 to overcome the errors of the Julian calendar. October had been
chosen as the best month to make the change because it had the fewest
number of saint's days. Thus, the dissemination of the new
calendars to Catholic countries began by the authority of the Inter
gravissimas bull. Spain, Italy, and Portugal immediately conformed,
followed soon after by other Catholic countries as calendar production
proliferated. (14)
II. TRACING PROTESTANT REJECTION
Protestant rejection of the Gregorian calendar is best understood
as a reaction to the reform or counter-reform agenda of the Council of
Trent and to a perceived papal plot for religious and political
domination. The belief that the pope was seeking to dictate even time
itself was spurred on when the decree for calendar reform was pronounced
through a papal bull, a medium that asserted the authority of the pope
and rendered the reform of the calendar an issue of Roman Catholic
ecclesiastical rule. This is evident from the first lines of the bull,
which designated the calendar Inter gravissimas, "among the most
serious" of tasks. (15) The text continued by asserting that the
reform of the calendar was a "pastoral duty" passed on by the
last session of the Council of Trent in 1563 and aided by God, thereby
linking the calendar inextricably to the one council that Protestants
considered a threat to their preservation. (16)
An additional disconcerting factor for Protestants was that the
leader of Gregory's commission, Christopher Clavius, was also a
member of the Jesuit order. As Scott Manetsch points out, "Huguenot
leadership [was] becoming increasingly alarmed ... by the growing
influence of the Society of Jesus throughout Europe." (17)
Consequently, to assume the calendar would enhance Jesuit credibility.
Indeed, this perception was shared by Lutheran pastors residing in lower
Austria who opposed the introduction of the calendar by the Catholic
constituency partly out of a concern for the growing influence of the
Jesuit party. (18) In seeking to create a united front of German
Lutherans in opposition to the calendar, the pastors of this region
essentially bound Lutheran identity "against Catholic
encroachment." (19) Though not for certain Protestant astronomers
like Tycho Brahe or Johanne Kepler, these religious obstacles were
substantial enough to incite some Protestant mathematicians and
astronomers to express opposition to the Gregorian revisions despite a
widespread acknowledgment of the legitimacy of the calendar's
scientific endeavor. This response is evident within the research of H.
M. Nobis, which claims that the Protestant astronomer Michael
Maestlin--Kepler's tutor-regarded the issue of the calendar as a
matter of faith and rejected its reform believing that the pope was
using the calendar to further his dominion. (20)
This resistance to the calendar on the part of Protestants was
widely shared. For those Catholic countries with substantial Protestant
communities, their resistance had a detrimental effect on the flow of
civil society in matters of trade and commerce, making it difficult for
their countries to introduce the calendar efficiently and uniformly.
Thus, in such cases, the authority of the civil ruler--rather than that
of Pope Gregory--was necessary to bring about the successful
introduction of the bull, such as in Bavaria. (21) At the same time,
however, the example of Austria indicates that even the civil
authorities could not always ensure the immediate conformity of a
characteristically "protesting" religious group.
Through the work of Rona Gordon, the confessional divisions in the
Habsburg hereditary lands--specifically the archduchy of Austria below
the Enns--have been analyzed in terms of the events surrounding the
introduction of the Gregorian calendar. (22) Her research illustrates
how the immediate acceptance of the calendar was impeded by the presence
of Protestant Lutherans who believed that the papal decree "lacked
legitimate authority." (23) Mixed religious communities in the
districts of this archduchy exploited the issue of time as a means of
expressing religious identity in opposition to their Catholic neighbors.
(24) Consequently, at one point, "the diocese of Passau was
divided," as Gordon says, "into two time-zones, ten days
apart." (25) This resulted in a disruption to the city's
religious holidays, as when Christmas was celebrated on different days,
which additionally had adverse affects on the flow of trade and
commerce. In response, the local magistracy was enlisted for the purpose
of forcing resisting bodies to comply. Despite the calendar's
re-introduction to the territory in 1583 by the emperor, the Protestant
harangue over the "confessionalization of time" delayed the
acceptance of the Gregorian calendar for several years. (26) By 1585,
many Lutheran pastors were threatened with the loss of their occupation
if they did not embrace the calendar in accordance with Imperial
approval, a measure that proved convincing. (27) Still, due to Lutheran
opposition, it was not until the late 1580s that the calendar was
uniformly used throughout these particular lands.
In due course, Catholic countries adopted the Gregorian calendar
while Protestant countries continued to react with reticence, fearing
that they would be compelled by Tridentine forces to accept not only the
calendar but Catholicism as well. (28) From this perspective, the
Council of Trent was equated with notions of a belligerent Catholicism
that had both religious and political consequences. In Geneva's
history, this concern may be seen in its sixteenth-century opposition to
calendar reform, as led by Calvin's successor, Theodore Beza.
Manetsch's research on Beza indicates that rumors and fears of a
"Tridentine conspiracy" circulated among the Swiss cantons
around the time of the calendar's introduction. (29) He asserts,
"for Beza and many Huguenots, the legacy of Trent comprised much
more than a collection of doctrinal statements or a program of
ecclesiastical reform.... For Beza, the promulgation of the Tridentine
reforms was equivalent to a declaration of war on Protestantism."
(30)
This belief was confirmed when Genevan independence was threatened
by the neighboring Catholic territory of Savoy in 1582, the very year of
the calendar's introduction. The effort to overpower the city by
Charles-Emmanuel I was perceived by Beza as the first act of aggression
against the evangelical cities of Switzerland in accordance with the
Tridentine agenda. (31) Consultation of Geneva's Registres des
Conseils indicates that on December 10, 1582, the council discussed the
possibility of following the lead of France and Savoy to accept the
calendar "in order to remedy the disorders and confusions of
dates." (32) However, in the end, the council resolved to await the
decision of its religious allies. Thus, the issue was eventually
considered by the Swiss cantons at the Diet of Baden in the spring of
1584, but believing that the calendar was part of a papal plot intended
to ferment division among the evangelical cantons, they officially
rejected the calendar.
The decision of the Swiss cantons was shared by Protestant Germany,
where antipapal sentiment and fear of a Catholic plot also dictated
resolve. (33) It was not until 1613, at the Diet of Regensburg, that the
matter was again debated. At that time, Kepler argued that the work of
expert mathematicians and astronomers to reform the calendar would not
necessitate the acceptance of the papal bull by Protestants. Despite
this effort, however, he did not persuade the Diet to embrace the
calendar. Indeed, the work of Trevor Johnson shows that by 1620, German
Protestant resistance to the Gregorian reform was reinvigorated by the
Catholicizing decrees of Maximilian I, Duke of Bavaria, after his
invasion of the Upper Palatinate in 1620, which included the gradual
introduction of the calendar. (34) Maximilian was considered to be the
"quintessential Counter-Reformation prince" by many, and
nobles who were intent on opposing his rule by emigrating rather than
converting to Catholicism continued to use the old calendar dates in
letters as "hallmarks of confessional allegiance." (35)
Although the matter was considered again at the close of the Thirty
Years' War in 1648 and after the peace of Ryswick in 1697, the
calendar was still not revised.
Thus, on various fronts and with varying results, Protestant groups
refused to conform to the calendar in both Catholic and Protestant
countries. As one can see through this general survey, usage of the
Julian calendar had widely become a symbol of Protestant loyalty and
confessional identity in opposition to the supremacy of the Council of
Trent and the papacy over civil and religious affairs. With regard to
these points, historiography is in marvelous consensus; however, in many
ways, this is only one part of the story because the Protestant
communities did not continue to reject the revisions introduced by the
Gregorian calendar. Thus, the question that is not considered often
enough by historiography is raised: what circumstances led Protestants
to abandon their former resistance and eventually embrace the calendar?
In 1982, the Vatican hosted a conference in commemoration of the
400th anniversary of the Gregorian reform of the calendar, and out of
this conference a collaborative project produced through a series of
articles one of the few books dedicated to the study of the calendar.
Work by Owen Gingerich on "The Civil Reception of the Gregorian
Calendar" and Michael Hoskin on "The Reception of the Calendar
by Other Churches" was included that, while providing a helpful
overview examining the general state of various countries in reaction
for and against the implementation of the calendar, lacked the specifics
necessary to establish regional variants when answering why Protestants
eventually adopted the calendar. Indeed, the explanation that
Protestants had simply surpassed their "morbid hatred of Rome"
does not provide the historian with an adequate grasp of this remarkable
transformation of opinion on their part. (36) Key questions remain: what
factors led Protestant countries to finally make the change, and how did
they legitimate their decision?
While acknowledging that general historical analyses do offer many
benefits, region-specific studies are especially necessary for
comprehending the crucial elements that influenced a particular context
in its transformation. This methodological approach was advanced chiefly
in Enlightenment studies by the work of Roy Porter. (37) Since these
explanations are not geographically uniform, it is the challenge of the
historian to enter into historical space without being overly influenced
by one's own contemporary assumptions as well as the
interpretations of previous generations of scholars to the detriment of
historical analysis. In this way, a regional focus can prevent the
historian from making false generalizations--in other words, from
applying conclusions that pertain only to certain contexts--as well as
from perpetuating false information.
The advantage of a regional approach to the topic of the Gregorian
calendar was most recently demonstrated in Robert Poole's 1998 work
on the history of the calendar in early modern England. By exploring the
eventual acceptance of the Gregorian calendar in 1752, Poole uncovers a
historiographical falsehood--previously suggested in a 1982 essay by
Paul Alkon--passed down from generations of historians regarding the
supposed "calendar riots" in England during the 1750s. (38)
The story of English rioters crying out, "Give us our eleven
days!" after the official correction of the calendar is a
well-known tale that quaintly symbolizes the inanity of the common
people, unable to appreciate or acknowledge the progress of a new
scientific age. Through Poole's careful regional study, however, he
confirms, "In the archives, in the press, and in contemporary
literature, there is evidence of confusion and complaint, and of
educated disdain for the objections of the uneducated, but of calendar
riots at either the passage or implementation of the act, there is no
sign." (39)
Rather, this "myth"--as Poole calls it--originated in
great part with William Hogarth and has been perpetuated by
historiography ever since, not least of all in the work presented at the
Vatican Conference. (40) This instance, then, illustrates the importance
of a regional focus or national contextualization when evaluating the
events of the Gregorian calendar and the reasons for the eventual
acceptance of the calendar by Protestants in particular areas and at
particular points in their history.
Appropriation of this focus to the context of eighteenth-century
Geneva presents a compelling case of Reformation rejection and
Enlightenment acceptance of the calendar at the commencement of the
century, 1701. During a time when Geneva was still largely regarded as
the "Rome of Protestantism" and living in John Calvin's
legacy, the Genevan story of the calendar offers insight into the
transition from the Reformation to the Enlightenment. (41)
III. GENEVA AND THE "CALENDRIER NOUVEAU"
Research at Geneva's Bibliotheque publique et universitaire
and Archives d'Etat has uncovered a limited number of resources for
reconstructing the events surrounding the calendar. Consequently, this
narrative primarily relies upon the minutes found within the Registres
des Conseils. Although the records of the official correspondence of the
Company of Pastors also include a few letters from Zurich and Berne on
the topic, a telling point to consider is that the Registres de la
Compagnie des Pasteurs make no mention of the calendar, while the
Registres du Consistoire provide merely one small entry. Consultation of
sermons and correspondence is still underway, but there is much that can
be concluded and inferred from the sources already assessed.
The year 1700 was considered a leap year according to the
astronomical principles of the Julian calendar, unlike the Gregorian
calendar. This rendered the Julian version an additional day in
error--eleven instead of ten. Protestant countries were highly aware of
this forthcoming change, to the extent that it became one of the
precipitating factors in the Protestant decision to amend their opinion
of the calendar. (42)
On April 5, 1699, the Genevan council discussed the forthcoming
leap year. It is clear from the registers that the leap year, which
would effectively widen the gap between the two calendars, was perceived
as an "embarrassment" and became the catalyst for the
council's desire to renew discussion with the allied cantons. (43)
Subsequently, the Premier Syndic Gautier entered into conversation with
statthalter Hess of Zurich regarding the matter and suggested that they
know the opinion of King William III of Britain. This is merely the
first point at which one sees that Geneva was not willing to adopt the
calendar without the assurance of its Protestant allies.
During this time, the Protestant princes of Germany had chosen to
reconsider their position towards the calendar at the Diet of
Regensburg. On September 23, 1699, astronomer Erhard Weigel proposed
that they simply substitute the Catholic tables of Clavius with
Kepler's Tabulae Rudolphinae first printed in 1617. He claimed that
the usage of Kepler's tables would free Protestants from having to
attribute the calendar to the authorship of the papacy, one of the
principal reasons behind their initial rejection of the calendar. In
this way, they took a step toward accepting the Gregorian calendar, but
not to call it by that name. Instead, it was named the "Improved
Calendar." (44) They then decided that on February 18, before the
Gregorian leap year would take effect, Germany would skip eleven days,
thereby aligning itself with the timetables of Europe's Catholic
countries.
While Protestant Germany moved ahead in their discussion of the
alterations of the Julian calendar, debate over the matter in Geneva
lagged, and the issue was not officially discussed again by the councils
until January 27, 1700. (45) Once more, information regarding the
allies' sentiments towards the calendar was requested. In
anticipation of the complications that would arise for Geneva if the
Protestant states and princes of Germany accepted the calendar, the
council informed the allies that the Gregorian calendar was
"without contradiction more just and more regular than the old,
[and] it would be hoped that we would follow the same example."
(46) In other words, the calendar had become, at this point, an issue of
precision rather than religion. However, the next entry in the official
registers does not present itself until February 13, only five days
before Germany was scheduled to switch calendars. One may note a tone of
urgency as Geneva requested, yet again, to know the allies'
"disposition" towards the acceptance of the calendar. (47)
Not until February 19, the day after Protestant Germany altered its
calendar, did Geneva receive a letter from Berne informing the council
of its decision. This letter was dated February 15 and explained to
Geneva that Zurich and Berne had examined the matter and decided
"together" that it was "best not to be hastened in
acceptance for the present." (48) Additional conference with the
evangelical cantons was suggested, and hesitancy to follow the Empire
was excused due to the uncertainty of the position of their
"cousins" England and Sweden. (49) Days later, Geneva received
a letter from Zurich verifying the decision to wait, and Geneva
consented to this plan.
Despite the fact that England and Sweden did not accept the
Protestant alteration of the calendar until the 1750s, (50) in the last
year of the seventeenth century, the registers record that the deputies
of the evangelical cantons agreed to accept by the turn of the century
what they called the "Calendrier Nouveau," for the benefit of
political and commercial affairs. (51) This decision was made at the
conference of the Protestant cantons held at Aarau from April 20 to 24,
1700. At this meeting, "the deputies of the cantons recognized
unanimously the advantage of the proposed change for the civil and
commercial relations." (52) Subsequently, to ensure the uniformity
of time within the Swiss evangelical cantons, January 1, 1701, was to be
counted as January 12. The Council of Geneva was also invited to visit
Berne to discuss the resolution established at the Diet of Baden in
1699. (53) With characteristic loyalty evident in all the transactions
concerning this matter, the council agreed that it "must follow
[Berne and Zurich's] example." (54)
Soon after, a committee was created for the purpose of dealing with
the practical complications that could arise within the city. (55) As a
result of the change, certain civic and religious alterations were
necessary. For example, the day of l'Escalade--an annual
celebration of Geneva's defeat of the Duke of Savoy in 1602--was
moved to December 23, the day before the administration of Advent's
Holy Communion. (56) This day of commemoration required both civil as
well as liturgical modifications given that the sermon of the Escalade was carried out according to a complex rotation schedule of professors
of ecclesiastical history and half-pay pastors. (57)
Furthermore, the committee was in charge of introducing the change
to the city. Thus, on December 14, 1700, a placard was posted throughout
the city making known the resolution "to follow the new calendar
into the future by the example of the honorable evangelical cantons, our
very clear allies." (58) The publication legitimated the change by
the authority of "most of the Protestant Princes and States"
and as "for the good a advantage of commerce, and other good
considerations." (59) Indeed, in order to grasp the significance of
this reason, it is important to identify the dual economic and political
implications that a concern for commerce in the city of Geneva entailed.
After the positive resolution of Protestant Germany, Geneva and the
Swiss cantons were not in a position to be the only territories on the
European continent living by a different calendar--regardless of the
decisions of England and Sweden. Besides the obvious confusion that
would result due to varying timetables, a situation that Beza had
predicted in a letter to Robert le Macon in 1582, Geneva lacked the
necessary economic and political independence to subsist without any
regard for the position of its European allies and neighbors. (60) In
the first place, Geneva's economic situation was unlike most towns
in that its affluence was not connected to the land and agricultural
production, and therefore, it was not capable of meeting its own
agrarian needs. Rather, the most prolific industries of Geneva included
banking--as represented by the successes of Jacques Necker--investing,
horology, and cotton textiles. Indeed, by the 1770s, "virtually no
citoyens or bourgeois worked for their daily bread in agriculture."
(61) As a result, the money earned from other professions provided for
the subsistence needs of Genevans, which reveals that economic stability
and growth was dependent upon the quality and reputation of
Geneva's industries and professions as well as its appeal to a
broader market.
In addition to its economic and agrarian reliance, a great part of
Genevan political independence was due to the goodwill of its
neighbors--namely France, and its Protestant allies--to preserve the
freedom of the Republic. As Linda Kirk asserts, "There is a sense
in which Geneva's sovereignty had from the sixteenth century hung
by a thread. Realistically, no polity as small as the city-republic
could defy the armed hostility of its neighbors." (62) For example,
although Genevan financial power did allow it some significant political
leverage over France, this relationship was still extremely precarious
in nature and necessitated that Geneva exercise a diplomatic approach in
all interactions. This burden of diplomacy may be seen in the
city's strained relationship with "the desert churches"
of France, led by Antoine Court. Because the city had functioned as the
primary supporter of the Huguenot cause in France on numerous previous
occasions-not least of all during the recent revocation of the Edict of
Nantes in 1685--the resident de France, who was required to live within
the city of Geneva, kept a close watch on the supportive efforts of such
pastors as Benedict Pictet and reported all occurrences back to
Versailles. (63) Since balancing the interdependent relationship with
France was one of the highest priorities of the Genevan government, this
political need supplanted the city's traditional role as the
Protestant stronghold and thereby rendered "official support of
Huguenots in France impossible." (64) Unofficially, however,
evidence discovered by Otto Selles indicates that the church provided a
variety of support to Court and the desert churches by a group of
pastors who managed "to circumvent France's surveillance--as
the Resident himself had predicted." (65 Given this information,
one may see a Geneva torn between its desire to support openly the
Huguenot cause and its need to avoid open hostility and preserve
political networks. It is no wonder that it appeared to "the Desert
pastor, who risked his life everyday, [that] Calvin's descendants
had hidden themselves in a cloak of prudence." (66) Evidently, out
of political necessity, they had. Indeed, despite frequent disturbances
and aggravations caused by the resident de France, Genevan diplomacy was
always tempered in its responses and actions towards the resident. (67)
This priority to please may be seen at the turn of the new century, when
the resident was presented with a gift by the council of "a trout
of twenty-five pounds and twenty-four double bottles of wine from St.
Laurens"--items that were often given to supplement salaries of
those funded by the Republic, such as the pastors. (68)
Thus, although the decision to improve the calendar by Protestant
Germany was a precipitating factor in Geneva's eventual resolve to
adopt it, this is clearly not the only factor. Simple explanations found
in historiography asserting that "the capitulation of the remaining
German principalities was apparently too much for the northern Swiss
cantons" do not do justice to the regional circumstances of Swiss
cities like Geneva grappling with this decision. (69) Furthermore, it is
particularly telling that Geneva and the Swiss cantons did not embrace
the calendar at the same time as Protestant Germany, and, when they did
accept the calendar, that they did not identify it by the German
name--the "Improved Calendar"--but rather by their own
title--the "New Calendar." These points indicate a certain
amount of independence from their German evangelical allies. On the
other hand, a look at Geneva's political and economic dependencies
quickly shows that this city was not in a position to pave its own way
without regard for its allies. As more and more European countries gave
in to these changes, the calendar grew in importance to the commercial
and political well-being of the city. Consequently, after consulting
with the Swiss evangelical cantons and weighing the various factors
carefully, Geneva adopted the Gregorian calendar, beginning the new
century on January 12, 1701.
IV. GENEVAN RELIGION AND POLITICS IN RELATION TO THE CALENDAR
When one considers the politics of the calendar through the
narrative of the civic and ecclesiastical registers, Genevan leadership
in religious and political matters may be observed in an unexpected
light. It was no longer 1582, when Theodore Beza rejected calendar
reform on behalf of the city through his letters and sermons. (70)
Instead, the Genevan clergy were without complaint or opposition. (71)
Indeed, this lack of concern over the matter is evident when the pastors
of the Compagnie presented a special speech to the council before the
onset of the eighteenth century, a custom practiced by Beza at the
beginning of the seventeenth century. (72) Their visit was intended to
offer a public reflection on the events of the past century, give thanks
to God for the many blessings bestowed, reaffirm the commitment of the
Compagnie to the council, and request the continued support of the
council in protecting the church and the academy. (73) Significantly, in
no part of this historic address given by Louis Tronchin on behalf of
the pastors and professors of Geneva was the new calendar questioned or
even mentioned. This is one indication that the matter of the calendar
was no longer considered an issue of confessional identity. In seeking
to understand why this may be the case, one may argue that there was a
lack of religious debate in Geneva because there was not a significant
number of Catholics living within the city at the time. As it had been
for Protestants in lower Austria, a considerable Catholic presence in
Geneva very likely would have made the implementation of the calendar an
issue of confessionalization and religious identity. This seems a
probable explanation when one compares Geneva's situation with the
Swiss canton of Glarus, where perception by the internal Catholic
community was taken into consideration before the canton accepted the
calendar due to the fear that because "a much greater number of
festivals would be celebrated the same day by the two confessions
... that this simultaneity would bring about conflict." (74)
On the contrary, records do not indicate the presence of such a fear in
Geneva. Furthermore, consultation of Geneva's government,
religious, and criminal records of the state reveals that no such
conflict occurred.
What role, then, if any, did religion play in the acceptance of the
new calendar? Despite the absence of an explicit reference to the
calendar, Tronchin's speech to the Council illustrates one dynamic
of the interdependent relationship between Geneva's religion and
politics. Through his speech, one may grasp how important the well-being
of the state was perceived for the future of the Genevan church. By this
reasoning then, since the calendar was considered a benefit to the state
politically and economically and no longer considered a threat to
Genevan religion as it had been in the Tridentine period, the pastors
did not oppose calendar reform. In addition, given the growing
theological concern in the Genevan church to bring about Protestant
unity, acceptance of the calendar was most likely seen by the church as
another means for aligning itself with their religious allies. This
ecumenical priority was evident on the first day of the eighteenth
century when Pastor Jean-Alphonse Turrettini delivered an historic
sermon in celebration of the dawn of a new century. Though there was no
mention of the calendar per se found in his sermon, there was reference
to the need to bring about Protestant unity. Turrettini concluded his
sermon expressing the hope that "the unfortunate divisions which
have sometimes troubled this church would be buried forever" and
encouraged the pastors, magistrates, and the people "to work, as
much as it depends on us, towards the extinction of the sad schism which
has been so fatal to the Protestant churches for the last two
centuries." (75) Thematically speaking, by this agenda of
Protestant unity, the calendar appears to possess some theological
bearing on Geneva's religious situation. Here, the calendar may be
seen as one means of uniting Protestant groups with each other by
ensuring union in the reckoning of not only civil time but also
religious time in terms of the celebration of Easter. Beyond that, this
decision to embrace calendar reform symbolized a partial meeting between
the two divided camps of western Christianity as an even greater step
towards healing the "sad schism" of the Reformation. (76) That
being said, it is still remarkable that a religious discussion of the
government's decision to embrace the new calendar was not found in
the religious records beyond one mundane entry regarding practical
alterations to civic and religious holidays. (77) Thus, according to the
sources, it seems that religion was no longer a hindrance to calendar
reform; on the contrary, the theological ideology and political
circumstances of the time enabled religious leaders to embrace this
transition without rebuke. Consequently, the calendar offers an
intriguing sociohistorical example of the theological shift occurring
within Geneva's church under the leadership of Turrettini towards a
priority for Protestant unity.
In addition to a surprising lack of religious objection to or
discussion of the Council's decision, Geneva also did not seem to
sway the political opinion of its Protestant allies. Throughout the
discussion of the calendar, Geneva exhibited a willingness to embrace
this new change as early as April 1699, but a hesitancy to lead the
decision of the Swiss cantons. Although expressing the desire to follow
the example of Germany in January, Geneva waited to be certain of Zurich
and Berne's position, even until the point when the deadline
passed. Through this incident, the city's political dependency
becomes particularly apparent. Indeed, the coming century reveals that
Geneva required the military support of Zurich and Berne on numerous
occasions when faced with political uprisings in the city. (78) Thus,
though Genevan leadership and decisiveness in matters of religious
revisions for the Swiss cantons and other Protestant communities may
still be seen at this time, it is evident by their reservation
concerning the calendar that its acceptance had become primarily an
issue of political negotiation. (79)
It is also worth acknowledging that this change in opinion
regarding the calendar as represented by Protestant Germany and the
Swiss cantons came at a time of growing internationalism among
scientific bodies without regard to religious affiliation. Indeed, the
foundation and development in the early eighteenth century of the
Swedish academy of sciences provides one example of how science was
increasingly forging connections between international bodies. (80) At
the same time, however, evidence of a continued reliance on
"evangelical mathematicians" or the establishment of a
"reformed almanac" for astronomical decisions indicates that
religious identity was still a factor. In such ways, Protestants made
clear that they "were not simply adopting the Gregorian
calendar." (81) This is most apparent in the debate surrounding the
calculation of Easter.
Despite steps made by Protestant constituencies to embrace the
principals of the Gregorian calendar, hesitancy persisted over the exact
calculation of Easter. In the Improved or New calendar, Easter was
calculated according to Kepler's Rudolphine tables according to a
resolution passed on January 10,1700; however, it soon became clear that
his tables were astronomically inaccurate. In 1724 and 1744, the
discrepancy between the Gregorian and the Protestant calendar was
increasingly obvious when Protestants celebrated Easter one week before
Catholics. (82) This practice continued until 1775 when Frederick the
Great resolved the discrepancy by adopting the Catholic algorithms,
thereby marking yet another step towards mending the divisions of the
Reformation.
V. CONCLUSION: A CENTURY IN TRANSITION
The history of the Protestant acceptance of the Gregorian calendar
is fraught with hesitant steps. Their caution may be seen in a variety
of actions: being threatened by an eleven-day regression of the Julian
calendar rather than the ten-day error; accepting the principles of the
Gregorian calendar yet refusing to call it by that name; and deciding to
not calculate Easter by the most precise astronomical tables because
they were authored by a Catholic until eventually the imprecision was
too palpable. Yet, despite all these tentative steps, it is crucial to
see that they are still steps. And so it is that in the eighteenth
century, the age of Enlightenment, confessional divisions were gradually
set aside for the benefit of commerce, trade, and scientific precision.
This assessment, however, is not intended to perpetuate the
short-sighted notion that the "rise of science" ushered in a
"decline of religion." Rather, the story of the Gregorian,
Improved, or New calendar is an event that characterizes a century in
transition, seeking to re-unify itself after the religious divisions
that were introduced into its communities by the Reformation. Although
Protestants and Catholics still could not agree on matters like the
number of sacraments, they were eventually able to agree on how to
reckon time, and with that concurrence, Geneva began the eighteenth
century.
(1.) Elisabeth Achelis, Of Time and The Calendar (New York:
Hermitage House, 1955), 46.
(2.) Although France accepted the Gregorian calendar in December
1582, after the French Revolution and as part of both the anticlerical
zeal and the concerted effort to rid the Republic of visual associations
with old France, the Gregorian calendar was replaced by the Calendrier
Republicain to "reconstruct time through a republican
cosmology": Simon Schama, Citizens: A Chronicle of the French
Revolution (London: Penguin, 1989), 654. Schama comments that the
commission perceived "the reform as an opportunity to detach
republicans from the superstitions they thought embodied in the
Gregorian calendar": ibid. Consequently, France is the only country
to have officially accepted the Gregorian calendar twice in its history
when on January 1, 1806, Napoleon Bonaparte reinstituted the Gregorian
system.
(3.) I would like to extend particular thanks to the Bibliotheque
publique et universitaire de Geneve, Institut d'Histoire de la
Reformation (IHR), and the Archives d'Etat de Geneve for their
assistance during several research trips between 2004 and 2005. This
research was possible due to a departmental scholarship from the
University of St. Andrews and financial assistance from the IHR at the
Universite de Geneve. Furthermore, a version of this research was
presented at the British Society of Eighteenth Century Studies
conference at the University of Oxford in January of 2006.
(4.) The majority of historiography has extensively focused on the
history of the calendar up until the rejection of the Gregorian calendar
by Protestants in the sixteenth century. Robert Poole's book,
Time's Alteration: Calendar Reform in Early Modern England (London:
UCL Press, 1998), is one of the few works that provides a regional
approach to the Protestant acceptance of the Gregorian calendar.
(5.) Rice University's Galileo Project,
www.es.rice.edu/ES/humsoc/Galileo/.
(6.) Olaf Pedersen, "The Ecclesiastical Calendar and the Life
of the Church," in Gregorian Reform of the Calendar: Proceedings of
the Vatican Conference to Commemorate its 400th Anniversary, 1582-1982,
ed. G. V. Coyne, M. S. Hoskin, and O. Pedersen (Vatican City: Specola
Vaticana, 1983), 21.
(7.) The Julian calendar also introduced the system whereby odd
months were allotted thirty-one days and even months were allotted
thirty days. February was the exception to the rule in that it was
allotted only twenty-eight days while on leap years an extra day was
intercalated.
(8.) Rice University, The Galileo Project. This calculation often
differs minutely in scholarship depending upon the source. For example,
according to the work of Pedersen, one mean tropical year is 365.2422
days. See his article, "The Ecclesiastical Calendar and the Life of
the Church," in Vatican Conference.
(9.) Ibid. Differing information is cited on the The Galileo
Project website. In some parts, the text calculates the loss at 1 day in
130 years, and in other parts, it identifies the loss at 1 day in 128
years. Meanwhile, Poole claims that the Julian calendar error
accumulated to one day in 114 years: Time's Alteration, 33. Scott
Manetsch, in his book Theodore Beza and the Quest for Peace in France
1572-1598 (Boston: Brill, 2000), footnoted the calculation at 1 in 128
years: 121. According to J. D. North, the error should be calculated at
1 day in 128.6 years in 1582: "The Western
Calendar--'Intolerabilis, Horribilis, Et Derisibilis': Four
Centuries of Discontent," in Vatican Conference, 78-79.
(10.) North, 76.
(11.) Pederson, 46-47.
(12.) According to A. Ziggelaar's article, "The Papal
Bull of 1582 Promulgating a Reform of the Calendar," no evidence
exists to show that Protestant princes or mathematicians were included
in this dispersal: Vatican Conference, 209. However, despite no official
inclusion of Protestant opinion, H. M. Nobis's work indicates that
Protestant astronomers assessed the quality and accuracy of the
Compendium along with Catholic astronomers and sometimes at their
request: "The Reaction of Astronomers to the Gregorian
Calendar," in Vatican Conference, 243-45.
(13.) North, 75-76; Michael Hoskin, "The Reception of the
Calendar by Other Churches," in Vatican Conference, 255; Poole, 33;
In fact, Achelis, in her 1950s study, also supported this observation in
her book, Of Time and the Calendar, where she wrote, "The Easter
question was actually the source of the Papal intervention": 59.
(14.) Other Catholic countries were unable to conform immediately
to the papal decree due to delays in calendar publication. See
Ziggelaar, 220, and Nobis, 249.
(15.) Transcribed and translated in Zieggelaar, 202. Zieggelaar
claims that the Council of Trent did not directly demand the reform of
the calendar. In fact, "The decree of the Council does not say a
word on calendar reform but only speaks of a reform of the Mass book and
the breviary, so the calendar reform undertaken by the Pope can only be
said to be implied by the decree of the Council": 2.
(16.) Ibid.
(17.) Manetsch, 123.
(18.) See Rona Gordon's unpublished paper, "Confessional
Tensions in Lower Austria: The Gregorian Calendar Reform" (paper
presented at the Sixteenth Century Conference in Denver, 2001), 11. I
also owe a special thanks to her for taking the time to discuss the
topic with me.
(19.) Ibid., 11.
(20.) Nobis, 244. For further information on the theological
arguments used by Maestlin in opposition to adopting the calendar, see
Charlotte Methuen's article, "Time Human or Time Divine?
Theological Aspects in the Opposition to Gregorian Calendar
Reform," Reformation and Renaissance Review 3:1-2 (December 2001):
36-50.
(21.) Hoskin suggests that the Gregorian calendar most likely would
have been adopted sooner in Europe if secular authorities rather than
the Catholic religious body had initially introduced the change:
"The Reception of the Calendar," 255.
(22.) Gordon, "Confessional Tensions in Lower Austria."
(23.) Ibid., 3.
(24.) In fact, according to Gordon, the calendar served to unite a
fragmented Lutheranism throughout Germany: ibid., 11. Consider also the
Orthodox opposition in the eastern provinces of Poland and Lithuania
where mixed confessional communities required the printing of both
calendars alongside each other from 1606 to the twentieth century. See
Jerzy Dobrzycki, "The Scientific Revolution in Poland," in The
Scientific Revolution in National Context, ed. Roy Porter and Mikulas
Teich (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992), 151.
(25.) Gordon, 11.
(26.) Ibid., 7.
(27.) Ibid., 11.
(28.) The persistence of this opposition is evident in
eighteenth-century English publications. See contemporary responses like
John Wilies's in his work, The Julian and Gregorian Year, or, The
difference betwixt the old and new-stile shewing, that the reformed
churches should not alter their old-stile, but that the Romanists should
return to it (London: Printed for Richard Sare, 1700).
(29.) Manetsch, 123.
(30.) Ibid., 121.
(31.) Theodore Beza to M. de Walsingham, October 1582, found in
Geneva at the Bibliotheque publique et universitaire de Geneve
(hereafter BPU), Ms. lat. 117, fols. 174-75, as transcribed in Manetsch,
20, n 17. According to a sermon by Beza years later, he claimed that he
did not resist the revision of the calendar itself, "but the
reasons for the reform; the Catholics' concern for the precise
dates of ceremonies, feast and fast days smacked of Jewish
legalism": ibid, 122.
(32.) Geneva, Archives d'Etat de Geneve (hereafter AEG),
Registres des Conseil 77, December 10, 1582, fol. 241, as transcribed in
Charles Le Fort's article, "L'introduction du calendrier
gregorien a Geneve en 1701," in La Societe d'Histoire et
d'Archeologie de Geneve (Geneva: J. Jullien, 1886), 2:348. This
work is the only regional study of Geneva's acceptance of the
calendar that I could find, and its nineteenth-century analysis and
interpretation are limited in scope and approach.
(33.) Hoskin contends that the "driving force behind the
opposition was always dislike and even hatred of the Papacy."
However, in his opinion, without the princely power of the papacy during
that time, "no such reform could have been successfully introduced
in the Europe of the sixteenth century, and perhaps for centuries
thereafter. The Papacy was hated for the exercise of power, but there
was no other way": "The Reception of the Calendar," 263.
(34.) Trevor Johnson, "Patronage, Herrschaft, and Confession:
the Upper-Palatine Nobility and the Counter Reformation," in
Reformation Old and New: Essays on the Socio-Economic Impact of
Religious Change c. 1470-1630, ed. Beat A. Kumin (Aldershot, U.K.:
Scolar, 1997).
(35.) Ibid., 164.
(36.) Owen Gingerich, "The Civil Reception of the Gregorian
Calendar," in Vatican Conference, 259. Poole critiques this work
for its particularly Catholic slant saying, "In place of the
familiar whig/protestant vision of the rise of science and decline of
religion we have (putting it crudely) a Roman catholic vision of the
rise of science and decline of Protestantism": Time's
Alteration, 40.
(37.) See in particular Porter's work, The Enlightenment in
National Context (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981), and the
Scientific Revolution in National Context.
(38.) P. Alkon, "Changing the Calendar,"
Eighteenth-Century Life 7:2 (January 1982): 1-18.
(39.) Poole, 13.
(40.) Gingerich, 273.
(41.) The persisting reputation of Geneva as the pinnacle of
Reformed religion is evident in travelers' letters. See Voyageurs
europeens a la decouverte de Geneve, 1685-1792, ed. Jean-Daniel Candaux
(Geneva: Imprimeries populaires, 1966), 24, 84.
(42.) Indeed, Poole concludes that "the prospect of the two
calendars moving a day further apart in 1700 added urgency to the
discussions": "The Reception of the Calendar," 41.
(43.) "Que l'on examine s'il ne seroit pas a propos
de reformer notre calendrier en suivant le nouveau stil et eviter par ce
moyen l'embarras ou l'on se trouvera au prochain mois de mars,
que le stil nouveau devancera le vieux d'onze jours au lieu de dix,
et, pour cet effet, nous en entendre avec nos allies": AEG,
Registres des Conseils 199, April 5, 1699, fol. 127, as transcribed in
Le Fort, 349.
(44.) Gingerich, 267.
(45.) See AEG, Registres des Conseils 200, January 27, 1700, fol.
35. At this time, I am not aware if discussion between private
individuals regarding this matter continued between April 1699 and
January 1700. However, according to the registers no official discussion
took place.
(46.) "Il est sans contredit plus juste et plus regulier que
l'ancien il seroit a souhaiter que nous suivisisions le meme
exemple": ibid.
(47.) "Il a ete ordonne d'ecrire aujourdhuy a Mrs de
Zurich et de Berne pour les prier de nous faire savoir dans quelle
disposition ils sont a l'egard de l'acceptation du nouveau
Calandrier:" ibid., February 13, 1700, fol. 54.
(48.) "Il avoit ete trouve ensemble pour le mieux de ne se
precipiter pas dans lad[it]e acceptation pour le present, mais par un
prealable d'en conferer confidemment avec les louables Cantons
Evangeliques": ibid., February 20, 1700, fol. 62.
(49.) Ibid.
(50.) Despite Queen Elizabeth's efforts to introduce the
calendar, England rejected the reform under the influence of the clergy.
Again, this objection to the calendar was maintained due to its relation
to the pope, or the Antichrist as he was called, despite its scientific
virtues. Initially, English mathematician John Dee had favorably
assessed the calendar. England also persisted in celebrating the New
Year on March 25 rather than January 1 until the Act of Parliament in
1751 whereby Britain and the American colonies accepted the changes to
the calendar.
(51.) AEG, Registres des Conseils 200, July 23, 1700, fol. 214. The
reason for the decision is not expressly found in the registers until
AEG, Registres des Conseils 200, December 31, 1700, fol. 413.
(52.) "Dans la deliberation a laquelle cette lettre donna
lieu, les deputes des Cantons reconnurent unanimement l'avantage du
changement propose pour les relations civiles et commerciales": Le
Fort, "Le Calendrier Gregorien a Geneve," 350.
(53.) AEG, Registres des Conseils 200, August 5, 1700, fol. 228.
(54.) "Dont etant opine en ce Magn Conseil, il a ete dit, que
nous devons aussi suivre leur exemple": ibid.
(55.) "travailler a regler tousles inconveniens qui peuvent
resulter de l'introduction du nouveau Calendrier parmi nous":
AEG, Registres des Conseils 200, November 13, 1700, fol. 372;
"Etant necessaire de regler les dificultes qui peuvent naitre de
l'acceptation du nouveau Calendrier": AEG, Registres des
Conseils 200, December 30, 1700, fol. 412.
(56.) AEG, Registres du Consistoire 69, January 13, 1701, fol. 189.
Communion was administered quarterly, a practice which was established
during the time of Calvin.
(57.) "ET AT DES FONCTIONS Actuelles des Spectables Pasteurs,
& des retranchemens approuves par le Magnifique Petit Conseil, pour
etre portes au Magnifique Conseil des CC": AEG, placard 3, no. 275,
fol. 1-11.
(58.) "Nosdits tres honores Seig[neur]rs ont trouve apropos de
suivre a l'avenir le nouveau Calendrier, a l'exemple de la
plupart des Princes et Etats Protestans, et en particulier des Louables
Cantons Evangeliques leurs tres chers Allies et Confederes": AEG,
Registres des Conseils 200, December 31, 1700, fol. 413.
(59.) "On fait savoir a toutes persormes, que pour le bien et
avantage du commerce, et autres bonnes considerations": ibid.
(60.) Theodore Beza to Robert Le Macon Seigneur de la Fontaine, 10
Ocober 1582, Correspondance de Theodore de Beze, XXIII (Geneva:
Librairie Droz, 2001). Reference is made regarding Savoy's
acceptance of the Gregorian calendar by decree of Charles-Emmanuel I and
how that would lead to "grandes confusion": 185.
(61.) Linda Kirk, "A Poor Church in a Rich City: The Case of
Eighteenth-Century Geneva," in L'Hostie Et Le Denier, ed.
Marcel Paucet and Olivier Fatio (Geneva: Labor et Fides, 1991), 259.
(62.) Linda Kirk, "Genevan Republicanism," in
Republicanism, Liberty, and Commercial Society, ed. David Wooton
(Berkley, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1994), 287.
(63.) Otto H. Selles, "A Case of Hidden Identity: Antoine
Court, Benedict Pictet, and Geneva's Aid to France's Desert
Churches (1715-1724)," in The Identity of Geneva: The Christian
Commonwealth, 1564-1864, ed. John B. Roney and Martin Klauber (Westport,
Conn.: Greenwood, 1998), 93-109.
(64.) Ibid., 94.
(65.) Ibid., 103.
(66.) Ibid.
(67.) The resident de France not only meddled in the religious and
political affairs of the city, but he was also an outspoken advocate for
establishing the theater in the city--a particularly controversial issue
at the time. See my paper, "An Enlightened Utopia? Exploring the
Theatre Controversy of Eighteenth-Century Geneva" (presented at the
American Society of Church History conference, Seattle, Wash., 2005), 6.
(68.) AEG, Registre des Conseils 200, January 12, 1702, fol. 417.
In the travel journal of Robert Montagu, Lord Mandeville, he observed in
1752, "they keepe the ... fairest troutes all the yeare long to
make presents to great persons when they come thorough Geneva." See
Michael Brennan, ed., The Origins of the Grand Tour, 3rd ser., no. 14
(London: The Hakluyt Society, 2004), 129.
(69.) Gingerich, 267.
(70.) Theodore Beza, Sermons sur l'histoire de la passion
(Geneva, 1592), 476-77, as cited in Manetsch, 122, n. 23. See also the
Correspondance de Theodore de Beze, vols. 23-25 (Geneva: Librairie Droz,
2001).
(71.) Consultation of the Proces Criminel records indicates a lack
of civil opposition as well.
(72.) AEG, Registres de la Compagnie des Pasteurs 18, November 22,
1700, fol. 167.
(73.) AEG, Registres des Conseils 200, January 12, 1701, fols.
413-17; AEG, Registres de la Compagnie des Pasteurs 18, January 14,
1701, fols. 169-71.
(74.) Le Fort, 351.
(75.) "Les malheureuses divisions qui ait quelquefois trouble
cette Eglise, soient ensevelies p[ou]r jamais: Et tachons meme de
travailler, autant que cela depend de nous, l'extinction de ce
triste Schisme, qui a ete si funeste aux Eglises Protestants, p[ou]r les
2 derniers Siecles": BPU, Ms. Compangie des Pasteurs 14, January
12, 1701. For a further look at Turrettini and Protestant unity, see
Martin Klauber, "The Drive Toward Protestant Union in Early
Eighteenth-Century Geneva: Jean-Alphonse Turrettini on the
'Fundamental Articles' of Faith," Church History 61:3
(September 1992).
(76.) Gottfried Leibniz, who was in correspondence with Turrettini
at the time, held similar ecumenical aspirations and was a great
supporter of the usage of science to mend these divisions at the time of
the calendar shift. See James McClellam III, Science Reorganized:
Scientific Societies in the Eighteenth Century (New York: Columbia
University Press, 1985), 68-70.
(77.) AEG, Registres du Consistoire 69, January 13, 1701, fol. 189.
(78.) Consider Geneva's civil conflicts in 1707, 1730s, 1760s,
and 1781-82.
(79.) See AEG, Registres de la Compangie des Pasteurs 18, April 29,
1701, fol. 232. References to the revised Psalms that were being
introduced in Calvinist churches at the start of the century are found
throughout the registers. As this particular example indicates, churches
all over the world including London and Holland were addressing Geneva,
requesting guidance on the topic of liturgical revisions approved by the
Genevan church.
(80.) See Sven Widmalm's article, "Instituting Science in
Sweden," in The Scientific Revolution in National Context, 245.
(81.) Poole, Time's Alteration, 42 (Italics are mine).
(82.) Nobis, 251; Gingerich, 267.
Jennifer Powell McNutt is a doctoral candidate in the School of
History, Reformation Studies Institute, at the University of St.
Andrews, Scotland. This essay was awarded the Mead Prize and selected
for publication in Church History by the Committee on Research of the
American Society of Church History: Jon Robersts (chair), Daniel
Bornstein, David Hempton, Maureen Tilley, and Paul C. Kemeny.