Welfare Reform in Frisian Towns: Between Humanist theory, Pious Imperatives and Government Policy

Publication date

2003

Authors

Spaans, J.W.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

DOI

Document Type

Preprint
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

Ole Peter Grell has challenged us to examine how, in an age dominated by faith, religion shaped public and private approaches to poor relief. His thesis is twofold. Ideologically, Protestantism changed the purpose of charity — from a benefit to the souls of donors in the hereafter to the relief of the indigent in the present. In terms of practice, without the Reformation the speed and extent to which poor relief was centralized in the seventeenth century would have been unimaginable. The role of civic humanism is relegated to a second place: humanists proposed reform as an option, for good Protestants it was an obligation ...

Keywords

Citation