Most early modern religious diaspora groups in Europe cultivated narratives of persecution and martyrdom and handed them on to future generations. Yet the function of such narratives changed in each migrant generation. Focusing on printed publications of Netherlandish exile communities in Germany and the Northern Netherlands, this article argues that the reception of persecution narratives underwent drastic changes and stimulated new religious identities that allowed believers to see themselves as part of a religious minority even if they now belonged to the dominant groups in society.La plupart des groupes diasporiques de l’époque moderne ont cultivé des récits de persécution et de martyre, et les ont transmis aux générations suivantes. Po...
The term “Evangelical” identifies a culture of religious practice and belief found within an Anglo-A...
Over the last twenty years, a wealth of studies into Early Modern exile movements across Europe have...
This article considers two contemporary ideas about movement and how they intersected with each othe...
Most early modern religious diaspora groups in Europe cultivated narratives of persecution and marty...
The Reformation is said to have sparked the first ‘refugee crisis’ in European history. This essay s...
This essay surveys the wave of new literature on early modern migration and assesses its impact on t...
Religious minorities living in diaspora offer fertile terrain for the study of the transmission of i...
Willem Frijhoff, Religious Migrations in the United Provinces Before the Second Refuge. According t...
This article argues that early modern Calvinism in particular can lay claim to a transnational space...
This paper proposes a Catholic case study in a field dominated by studies on Protestant migrants. On...
This dissertation overturns longstanding assumptions about the experience of exile in early modern E...
The Dutch revolt of the sixteenth century sparked one of the largest refugee crises of Reformation E...
Exile as conversion : some life stories of Czech emigrants in Berlin in the 18th century. Between...
On their journeys through the Dutch Republic and the German territories, seventeenth-century Quaker ...
In the century after the Peace of Westphalia (1648) Europeans witnessed a considerable number of dev...
The term “Evangelical” identifies a culture of religious practice and belief found within an Anglo-A...
Over the last twenty years, a wealth of studies into Early Modern exile movements across Europe have...
This article considers two contemporary ideas about movement and how they intersected with each othe...
Most early modern religious diaspora groups in Europe cultivated narratives of persecution and marty...
The Reformation is said to have sparked the first ‘refugee crisis’ in European history. This essay s...
This essay surveys the wave of new literature on early modern migration and assesses its impact on t...
Religious minorities living in diaspora offer fertile terrain for the study of the transmission of i...
Willem Frijhoff, Religious Migrations in the United Provinces Before the Second Refuge. According t...
This article argues that early modern Calvinism in particular can lay claim to a transnational space...
This paper proposes a Catholic case study in a field dominated by studies on Protestant migrants. On...
This dissertation overturns longstanding assumptions about the experience of exile in early modern E...
The Dutch revolt of the sixteenth century sparked one of the largest refugee crises of Reformation E...
Exile as conversion : some life stories of Czech emigrants in Berlin in the 18th century. Between...
On their journeys through the Dutch Republic and the German territories, seventeenth-century Quaker ...
In the century after the Peace of Westphalia (1648) Europeans witnessed a considerable number of dev...
The term “Evangelical” identifies a culture of religious practice and belief found within an Anglo-A...
Over the last twenty years, a wealth of studies into Early Modern exile movements across Europe have...
This article considers two contemporary ideas about movement and how they intersected with each othe...