ZWINGLI’S FIRST MATE
Anna Zwingli began life as Anna Reinhard of Zurich. Her father was a middle-class landowner which meant that she grew up in a comfortable but ordinary home. Her pedestrian lifestyle didn’t last forever though because somewhere between her 19th and 20th birthday she managed to attract a significant amount of excitement.
Anna caught the eye of the dashing and impossibly wealthy John von Knonau. The von Knonau family were the oldest and most prominent family in Zurich and John’s father had high hopes for his son. He sent him away to receive a flashy private school education and arranged for him to marry a high-born Austrian heiress.
John was happy to take the flashy private school but not so excited about the Austrian heiress. He had fallen in love with the decidedly less pedigreed but doubly more enchanting Anna Reinhard and no amount of Austrian aristocracy or wealth could derail his plans to marry her.
Anna and John were secretly married in 1504 and had to briefly contemplate living on love, fresh air, and sunshine when John’s father disowned him and cut off his inheritance. Without his trust fund, John and Anna were left to fend for themselves. John got a job as a town councilman and Anna produced three children, one of whom died in infancy.
As it turned out a town councilman didn’t earn quite enough to support a family of five and John decided to try a more lucrative career in the military. Pope Julius II had declared war on Louis XII of France and there was good money in fighting for the Pope. At the end of the war, John came home to Anna and the children, exhausted and broken in health. He died shortly after leaving Anna not only devastated but desperate as well. One thing Anna Reinhard had to learn very early on in life was to grieve and to do it with such strength of character so as not to allow it to completely engulf her and reduce her to ash.