'A very thoughtful and engaging account of the Swiss Reformation, broad in its perspectives and meticulous in the details of its scholarship. This will quickly emerge as the standard work in the English-speaking world.' C. Scott Dixon, The Queen's University of Belfast
Table of contents
Table of maps
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
1. Peasants, priests and soldiers: The Swiss Confederation in the Late Middle Ages
2. Zwingli and Zurich
3. The spread of the Reformation
4. War and disaster 1529-1534
5. Consolidation and turmoil 1534-1566
6. The radical challenge
7. Church building
8. Church and society
9. International Zwinglianism
10. Culture of the Swiss Reformation
Chronology
Principal figures
Further reading
Index