The real contrast, when you plot merchants vs reformation isn't, as Jeff points out, really Catholic vs Protestant. It's the
kind of Protestant: the merchants are most influential in precisely the places that came down on Calvin's side rather than Luther's - the French cantons, Holland, lowland Scotland and bits of England [and, IIRC, the more Huguenot parts of France fit the bill at least somewhat]. Luther and his hierarchical church picked up the slack where princes and nobles mattered - and it was a matter of princely influence. I saw a comment recently to the effect that Luther and the North German princes pulled of their version of the Reformation in large part because it was years before the people down in the parish churches noticed that anything was happening. In fact, judging by some of the music Bach was writing for the Thomaskirche, it was
decades before they noticed much beyond the fact that they could now understand what that guy up front was saying. Some Anglicans still haven't noticed
As an aside, one should not confuse 'large' and 'centralised' with 'powerful' when discussing monarchies. The 300-odd German princes were quite powerful, particularly if a bunch of them ganged up on the Emperor, and had no trouble dictating the religious affiliations of their subjects [cuius regio, eius religio was the mantra]. Some of them were very odd indeed, BTW, but IIRC many of the oddest were to be found among the Catholics.
n7axw wrote:JeffEngel wrote:
I'd not count Sweden or Germany as having an especially vibrant merchant class in that era either - certainly not Sweden, probably not Germany. Or Scotland. Venice is just the strongest counter-example.
I'd peg it more, if I needed some general rule, that Catholicism remained in states where the monarchies had a lot of influence/power over the papacy and could use it: France, Spain, the Hapsburg-dominated portions of the HRE, plus Italian city-states under the thumb of one of those or themselves with strong ties to Rome.
General norms do get tough to come by, don't they? I think that Germany's middle class was a bit stronger than you seem to be crediting. I can't really comment on Sweden or Scotland... although it is interesting to note that Presbyterian Scotland tended to be in the lowland areas which were a bit more merchantile oriented, whereas the Highlands remained Catholic. The three areas I was thinking about were Germany, Holland and England when I made my comment.
Buttressing your point, though, when in England Henry VIII decided he needed a divorce, he discovered that he didn't have as much influence as he needed with the Pope, got up one morning and declared, We are Protestants today... That turned into a bit of a bumpy ride for a while.
Don