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Religion History

Culture, Religion, and Demographic Behaviour

Catholics and Lutherans in Alsace

by (author) Kevin McQuillan

Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Initial publish date
Sep 1999
Category
History, Religion, Politics & State
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780773567924
    Publish Date
    Sep 1999
    List Price
    $110.00

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Description

McQuillan shows that the population of the once largely German-speaking region of Alsace was sharply divided into two major religious communities, one Catholic, the other Lutheran. Religion was a central source of identity and a filter through which the political struggles associated with the integration of the region into French society were perceived. The five communities McQuillan studies represent both the religious division in the region and the varying economic circumstances of the population. His analysis of the demographic record of these communities is based on a family reconstitution analysis, which permits a detailed study of patterns of marriage, illegitimacy, marital fertility, and childhood mortality. A wealth of demographic research attests to the fact that theological differences between religious groups on matters of marriage or sexuality do not necessarily lead to differences in demographic behaviour. McQuillan argues that religion mattered in the Alsatian case because religious affiliation became a central element of social identity. Over time this resulted in what historians have called the "confessionalization" of the population. It also meant that the far-reaching political changes that affected France and Alsace in the period 1750-1870 were seen by the population through the lens of religion. Not only a case study of Alsace but an exploration of the more general issue of the role of religion in promoting or delaying demographic change, Culture, Religion, and Demographic Behaviour will be of great interest to students in the fields of population, religion, and social change.

About the author

Kevin McQuillan is a demographer and a professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Western Ontario.

 

Kevin McQuillan's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"The investigation and interpretation of the archival material are first-rate ... the amount of information that may be inferred from these records is quite impressive." Jena M. Gaines, Department of History, Western Michigan University.