The Amish, with their horse-drawn buggies and distinctive plain dress, are one of the most recognizable religious communities in North America. Their story, however, begins not in the rural United States but in the turmoil of the Protestant Reformation in Europe. To understand who founded the Amish community, one must look to a specific leader who emerged from the broader Anabaptist movement, a man whose name gives the group its identity: Jakob Ammann.

1. The Radical Reformation: The Anabaptist Foundation

The Amish are a direct offshoot of the Anabaptist movement that arose in 16th-century Switzerland. Unlike Martin Luther or John Calvin, Anabaptists (“re-baptizers”) believed in baptizing only consenting adults, separating church and state, and practicing strict nonresistance. This made them radicals and targets of severe persecution from both Protestants and Catholics.

2. The Swiss Brethren: The Amish Precursors

The earliest Anabaptists in Switzerland were known as the Swiss Brethren. They formed in 1525 in Zurich, led by figures like Conrad Grebel and Felix Manz. The Swiss Brethren established the core principles of community, discipleship, and adult baptism that would later be inherited, and fiercely debated, by their Amish descendants.

3. Jakob Ammann: The Namesake Leader

The definitive founder of the Amish was Jakob Ammann (c. 1644 – c. 1730), an Anabaptist elder in Switzerland. In the 1690s, Ammann grew concerned that the Swiss Brethren were becoming too lax, losing their distinctiveness from the world. He called for a stricter interpretation of doctrine and practice, sparking a major controversy.

4. The Great Schism of 1693-1697

Ammann’s push for reform led to a series of ministers’ meetings. Key points of contention included the frequency of communion, the practice of foot washing, and the severity of shunning excommunicated members. When no reconciliation was reached, Ammann and his followers formally separated from the Swiss Anabaptists around 1693-1697. His followers became known as “Amish.”

5. The Doctrine of Meidung: Strict Shunning

A central, divisive tenet introduced by Ammann was a strict practice of Meidung, or shunning. He insisted that excommunicated members be completely avoided, even in social and business dealings, by their spouses and the entire community. This rigor was a primary fault line with other Anabaptists.

6. Persecution and Migration to the New World

Facing ongoing persecution and economic hardship in Europe, the Amish began migrating to North America in the early 18th century, primarily to Pennsylvania, invited by William Penn’s promise of religious freedom. The first sizable Amish settlement was in Berks County, Pennsylvania, in the 1730s.

7. No Single Founding Settlement in America

Unlike some communities, the Amish did not have a single founding American settlement. They arrived in successive waves and formed independent church districts across Pennsylvania, later spreading to Ohio, Indiana, and other states. Leadership was, and remains, local and congregational.

8. The Old Order Amish: Preserving Ammann’s Vision

In the late 19th century, a second major schism occurred within Amish communities in North America. As some groups adopted innovations like Sunday schools and revival meetings, others rejected them. Those who resisted change became known as the Old Order Amish, the most traditional and recognizable group today, who hold closest to Jakob Ammann’s original strictures.

9. The Beachy Amish and Other Affiliations

More progressive groups that split from the Old Order, often adopting cars and electricity, are generally called Amish-Mennonites. The Beachy Amish, named after bishop Moses M. Beachy, are a prominent example. There is a spectrum of affiliations, from ultra-conservative Swartzentruber Amish to more progressive ones.

10. Core Theological Beliefs: Gelassenheit

Amish theology centers on Gelassenheit (German for “yieldedness” or “submission”). This concept emphasizes humility, calmness, and submission to God’s will and the community’s authority over individual pride, which directly informs their plain dress, technology restrictions, and pacifism.

11. The Role of the Ordnung

Each Amish church district governs itself by an unwritten set of rules called the Ordnung. This code, specific to each community, outlines expected behavior, dress, and technology use. It is the practical, living application of Jakob Ammann’s original call for a separate, disciplined community.

12. Family and Agriculture as Central Pillars

From their earliest days, the Amish have centered life on family, farming, and manual trades. This was both a practical necessity in their European hideaways and a theological choice to maintain separation from the world. It remains a defining feature of their identity.

13. High German, Pennsylvania Dutch, and English

The Amish maintain a trilingual life: they pray and read the Bible in High German, speak Pennsylvania Dutch (a German dialect) at home and in community, and learn English for interaction with outsiders. This language separation reinforces their cultural boundaries.

14. Rumspringa: A Cultural Phenomenon

A well-known phase for Amish youth is Rumspringa (literally “running around”), typically beginning at age 16. During this time, rules are relaxed so youth can experience the outside world before deciding to commit to the church through adult baptism. Its modern form is a development of the 20th century.

15. Population Growth and Geographic Spread

Due to large families and high retention rates, the Old Order Amish population has doubled approximately every 20 years. They have established new settlements across over 30 U.S. states and Ontario, Canada, moving to find affordable farmland and maintain their insular communities.

16. Distinction from the Mennonites

While both are Anabaptist, the Amish split from the Mennonites (followers of Menno Simons) in 1693 under Jakob Ammann. Generally, Old Order Amish are more conservative, use technology more restrictively, and hold worship in homes rather than church buildings compared to most Mennonites.

17. Endurance Through Adaptation

Paradoxically, the Amish have survived and thrived by allowing controlled, slow adaptation. Their use of certain technologies (like hydraulic power or cell phones for business) is negotiated community-by-community within the Ordnung, showing a pragmatic flexibility within strict boundaries.

18. The Amish Today: A Living Legacy

Today, the Amish number over 350,000 in North America. They are not a relic of the past but a vibrant, growing ethno-religious group that continues to negotiate its relationship with the modern world, guided by the foundational principles set forth by their founder, Jakob Ammann, over three centuries ago.

19. Common Misconceptions About Origins

It is a misconception that the Amish are a “colonial” group frozen in the 18th century. Their beliefs were forged in 16th-century Europe, defined by a 17th-century schism, and their distinct Old Order identity crystallized in response to 19th-century American modernization.

20. A Founder’s Lasting Imprint

Jakob Ammann’s legacy is not a centralized institution but a resilient pattern of community. His insistence on strict church discipline, visible separation from the world, and submission to the Ordnung created a template that has allowed the Amish to maintain a unique identity for generations, making him the undeniable founder of the Amish community.

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Community, History,

Last Update: April 2, 2026