Weird History
The Calvinism Experiment in Geneva: When One Man Created a Theocratic Nightmare In 1541, Protestant reformer John Calvin was invited to rule Geneva, Switzerland, and he created one of history's most extreme theocracies. For decades, Calvin imposed strict religious laws that controlled every aspect of life - what people wore, what they ate, how they spoke, even their entertainment. Dancing was banned. Card games were forbidden. Swearing could result in public humiliation or execution. Geneva became a surveillance state where informants reported neighbors for minor infractions, and Calvin's hand-picked council executed anyone who challenged his authority. Calvin's Geneva was presented as a "New Jerusalem" - a model Christian society where Reformed theology would be perfectly implemented. In reality, it was a totalitarian regime where religious law was enforced through terror. People caught dancing faced whipping. Card players were fined and imprisoned. Women who wore fancy clothes or makeup were publicly shamed. Adultery was punishable by death. Heresy - which Calvin defined broadly - meant execution. Over the 25+ years of his rule, dozens were executed, including the famous case of Michael Servetus, a Spanish physician and theologian, who was burned at the stake for questioning the Trinity. Calvin's power came from his theological authority combined with the Geneva Council's military backing. He built a network of informants, conducted witch hunts that killed dozens, and exiled anyone who questioned his authority. Yet many people fled Geneva - refugees from Catholic persecution who then found themselves in Calvin's rigid theocracy and had to escape to places like France, England, or America. Some of history's most famous religious refugees came from Calvin's Geneva. But here's the moral complexity: Calvin also reformed education, established hospitals, and created the infrastructure that made Geneva prosperous. Some Swiss historians argue his reforms were necessary and beneficial, while others see him as a tyrant who weaponized religion for personal control. The debate continues 500+ years later. This episode explores Calvin's rise to power, the specific laws he imposed, the surveillance and informant networks, famous executions and witch hunts, why people fled, and whether his theocratic experiment was visionary reform or religious tyranny. Keywords: weird history, John Calvin, Calvinism, Geneva, theocracy, Protestant Reformation, religious extremism, Michael Servetus, witch hunts, religious control, Swiss history Perfect for listeners who love: religious history, theocracies, Reformation history, and religious extremism in action. Warning: This episode contains descriptions of execution and religious persecution. Listener discretion advised.
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