"Calvinism's First Battleground" sheds new light on the origin of
Calvinism and the Reformed faith through a detailed examination of the
Reformation in the Pays de Vaud.
A specifically Calvinist identity and theology emerged out of two key
conflicts in the region: first, the fight to turn away from Catholic
practices and traditions a population that had been forced to convert to
Protestantism by the Bernese after their conquest of Vaud in 1536;
second, the struggle against the Zwinglian political and theological
ideas that dominated the Swiss Confederation and differed from the
Calvinists' understanding of ecclesiastical discipline, the Eucharist,
and predestination. The Pays de Vaud was central to this struggle, for
it was subject politically to Zwinglian, German-speaking Bern, but many
of its ministers were more strongly influenced by Calvin. Calvin himself
was initially excited about the prospects for reform in the region, but
frustrations with the Swiss led him and the Genevans increasingly to
focus their efforts on France.
This history helps us to understand the broader contours of the
Reformation in French-speaking Europe, as its center of gravity shifted
from Meaux to Vaud and Geneva, and back to France again on the eve of
the Wars of Religion.