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The Swiss Confederation remained an enigma for the Frenchman John Calvin, and with good reason.1 This collection of territories was a unique and rather confusing political and cultural entity that had emerged piecemeal in the late Middle Ages. The very term Swiss, which makes sense to modern ears, hardly applied in the sixteenth century in a place where there was little sense of national identity.2 Humanists had begun to valorize Helvetia, and the wars against the Habsburgs and the Burgundians had done much to incite forms of patriotism, but loyalties remained largely local. Huldrych Zwingli had embraced a sense of the Swiss as the elect people of God, and even the young Heinrich Bullinger wrote of his countrymen as the Israelites of the covenant. The reality, however, was much less harmonious. By the beginning of the sixteenth century, the newly expanded Confederation (with the addition of Basel and Schaffhausen) was a collection of 13 members bound by a series of alliances but divided by internal tensions. Not least was the problem posed by Zurich, which during the previous century had made repeated, and unsuccessful, attempts to expand its hegemonic interests.3
Chapter 2 examines whether the sixteenth-century emirate of the cosmopolitan ruler Fakhr ad-Dīn II may have heralded the first premodern manifestation of a proto-secular, quasi-nationalist form of nondiscriminatory rule. The author follows a similar line of inquiry in plotting the trajectory of secularism in the subsequent period of the nineteenth-century emirate and the introduction of Napoléonic reform that was global in nature. To further underscore this point, a brief yet indicative comparison with the genesis of the Swiss confederation is adduced. The chapter ends with a review of the generation of nahda secularists in the nineteenth century, probing the reasons why their avant-garde ideas did not find a greater reception.
The system of alliances among imperial provinces and cities known as the Swiss Confederation, emerged as a distinct political unit within the German Empire. About 1370, the small states of the Confederation, whose territorial expansion had scarcely begun, were no more than isolated dots on the multi-coloured political map of what is now Switzerland. The rise of the Confederation at the fifteenth century was influenced very significantly, though not exclusively, by events in the Austro-Habsburg sphere of influence. The events in the Aargau underline the importance of relations with the Empire for the ambitions of the political elite within the Confederation. The transformation and decline of the political order built up by the Austrian dynasty and nobility were counterbalanced by the decisive progress in the constitution of urban territorial rule. The drive towards political independence and territorial expansion in the cities and rural cantons of the Confederation advanced alongside the beginnings of an institutional inner consolidation of the state.
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