Mark Jantzen is associate professor of history at Bethel College, North Newton, Kansas. He is coeditor, with John D. Thiesen, of H. G. Mannhardt's The Danzig Mennonite Church: Its Origin and History from 1569–1919.
“Jantzen emphasizes not only church and state dynamics but also
tensions within the governing party, as well as those within the
Mennonite community. The state increased its impact as the
population became increasingly nationalistic. Jantzen also observes
how theological developments among German Protestants influenced
Mennonite pastors and thought leaders. Jantzen portrays an evolving
Mennonite identity over a hundred-year period. His book makes a
significant contribution to understanding the richness, diversity,
and struggle in the Mennonite story.” —Mennonite Weekly Review
“Mennonite German Soldiers offers a fascinating, carefully
researched study of Prussian Mennonites during much of the
nineteenth century. The author describes with exacting detail how
persistent state and societal pressures coerced Mennonites into
becoming ‘good German citizens.’ The book is organized into ten
chapters, the last including observations on how profoundly the
self-understanding of this Mennonite community changed, resulting
in a culturally adapted Scriptural hermeneutic.” —Mennonite
Brethren Herald
“[A] fascinating analysis of how Prussian Mennonites adapted so
thoroughly between 1772 and 1880 to German national identity and
its attendant military responsibilities. . . . Jantzen deftly
combines social, political, and family history along with the more
traditional religious and political narratives to show us how
Mennonites, as individuals, members of their communities, and
family members, altered their religious identity. He also reveals
the shifting attitudes and approaches taken by various levels and
iterations of the Prussian government." —American Historical
Review
“This book deserves wide readership. The Mennonite experience in
nineteenth-century Prussia/Germany is an intriguing example of the
complex negotiations between a religious minority and the modern
state. Jantzen’s analysis also holds valuable insights for the
contemporary German Integrationsdebatte.” —German Studies
Review
“This is the first full-length study of a problem peculiar to
Mennonites, but with implications for other minority religious
groups and mainline churches: the issue of full political
participation and enthusiastic military service in defense of
shared national values. . . . This is a thoroughly researched work,
graced by a broad view and written with a clear persuasive style
that exhibits frequent poetic touches.” —The Mennonite Quarterly
Review
“In this engaging historical narrative, Mark Jantzen describes the
policies of the Prussian federal and regional governments toward
the Mennonites over a hundred-year period and the legal, economic,
and social pressures brought to bear on the Mennonites to conform.
. . . The public debates over their place in Prussian society shed
light on a multi-confessional German past and on the dissemination
of nationalist values.” —Canadian Mennonite
“Jantzen’s study is highly recommended for anyone interested in
Mennonite history. In addition to helping readers better understand
the history of this important segment of the Mennonite past, it
also sheds light on the character and identity of Mennonites from
this community, who migrated to Russia and from there to North
America and Latin America.” —Catholic Historical Review
“With this highly informative volume, Professor Jantzen takes a
major step in correcting the relative neglect, at least in English
historical literature, of this period of Mennonite history in
central Europe. While a number of German studies have addressed
significant issues of this stressful century in German Mennonite
history, none has done so with the analysis and Sitz im Leben
perspective that Jantzen demonstrates.” —Journal of Mennonite
Studies
“In his remarkable study of Mennonites in the Prussian East, Mark
Jantzen convincingly demonstrates how an examination of a seemingly
marginal religious minority can make significant contributions to
understanding larger historical processes, in this case those that
shaped Prussia and Germany and the development of the modern state
in Western Europe.” —Mennonite Life
“This abundantly documented study explores the course of
acculturation of the Mennonites, who from the sixteenth century on
settled in the Vistula Delta and became Prussian subjects in the
first partition of Poland. . . . That Jantzen’s discussion of the
two literary works frames his social and political interpretation
is also a welcome example of how productive it can be to combine
one’s specialization with different approaches to history.” —Church
History
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