Publication | Closed Access
Piety, Power, and the Purse: Religious Economies Theory and Urban Reform in the Holy Roman Empire
30
Citations
52
References
2012
Year
Religious Economies ModelReligiosityReligious PluralismEconomic HistoryReligious Economies TheoryIncumbent Religious FirmsPolitical EconomyReligious SystemsUrban HistoryCultural HistoryLanguage StudiesReligious GroupEconomicsHoly Roman EmpireUrban ReformCatholic MonopolyCatholic Church HistoryBusinessComparative Religion
The religious economies model has been influential in the sociology of religion. Yet, propositions drawn from the model have been difficult to test in the comparative and historical study of religion, generally for lack of appropriate data. We develop a general theory of religious disestablishment and apply it to the Reformation in 16th‐century Europe to explain variation in the abolition of the Catholic monopoly. We suggest three principal factors—changes in demand, entry control mechanisms, and political incentives—that explain why incumbent religious firms may lose their monopoly. We then analyze the resulting hypotheses in a systematic analysis of cities in the Holy Roman Empire. Our analysis yields mixed support for demand‐side factors and entry control mechanisms, and firm support for political incentives in the institution of reform.
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