P
Portofino
Guest
Thanks for those suggestions. I had a friend growing up who had an Italian surname and who was Presbyterian – but his religion was through his mother, who was of Scots-Irish descent.It’s a great poem, whatever one thinks of the political-religious message!
Actually this took place about a century after the Waldensians became Protestants. The best author on this is Euan Cameron, who has written two books on the Waldenses. Gabriel Audisio, who I believe is from a Waldensian heritage himself, has also written a couple of very good books on the subject (though sometimes I think his critical judgment can be questioned).
For centuries the Waldensians were basically “Italian Presbyterians,” but they have now federated with the Methodists as well, and I think have an agreement with the Baptists also. They certainly still exist (my advisor told a story once of a Dominican friend of his who visited a Waldensian church which had frescos of Dominicans massacring Waldensians, and was horrified).
Edwin
I also have a close friend who grew up in France and whose paternal grandfather was a Reformed (Calvinist) minister; that part of the family lived, at one time, in Switzerland. The grandfather’s household abstained from alcohol entirely, which, of course, was an anomaly for a French family (the grandfather, incidentally, is still in good health and is close to 100 years old, while his son – the father of my friend – is a highly successful executive and something of a wine connoisseur who maintains a large cellar, though he took his first drink only as an adult).
The Waldensians, the Petrobrussians, the Lollards, the Anabaptists – all of those pre-Reformation or radical Reformation groups interest me greatly.