cover image: Furgge

20.500.12592/3fc6ujk

Furgge

31 Aug 2024

Swiss Author Katharina Zimmermann sheds in her 1989 novel Furgge (a local name for the mountain Hohgant) very interesting light on the period of persecution of Anabaptists in the Emme Valley, Canton of Bern, Switzerland in the period of the late 17th and early 18th century leading to the incarceration or the forced emigration of many Anabaptists (Mennonites, Amish) to the Alsace, Southern Germany, the Netherlands and North America. The momentous historical events of the Reformation, which shook Europe for two hundred years are masterfully put into a story of a young farmer's wife, whose religious beliefs do not correspond to the official state religion of the Reformed Church as was resolutely enforced by the Bernese authorities in that period. The pacifism and strictly community-based form, including adult baptism, ran counter to the system of military draft of all young men and religious practice as a means of political control the state religion was applied to by the powerful government of Bern, the largest and most powerful city state north of the Alps in Europe before the French Revolution and the transformation of Switzerland to a modern state. Her growing doubts and increasing resistance not only leads to the destruction of her family but a life in despair and eventual death in prison. Katharina Zimmermann succeeds in weaving a gripping and very moving moral painting of a period in European history with great impact also on North America and readers in the United States and Canada. Consequently, her book was translated to English in 2017.

Authors

Katharina Zimmermann

Pages
4
Published in
Canada

Table of Contents