By the mid-seventeenth century, radical protestant tolerationists in Britain and the British Atlantic began to conceive of religious liberty as a civil liberty applicable to all subjects, in contrast to contemporary puritans who limited toleration to orthodox protestants. This essay seeks to explain why certain puritans, however small in number, came to adopt radical views on toleration in contrast to the religious mainstream in the Anglophone world. Drawing upon a longer history of ecclesiastical independence than considered in the existing scholarship on religious toleration, it identifies a hitherto unexplored relationship between ecclesiastical independence in England and the Atlantic World
Includes indexes.Bibliography: v. [1], p. 421-477.[1] From the beginning of the English Reformation ...
Early modern political thought transformed toleration from a prudential consideration into a moral o...
The Puritans on Independence sheds light on the rise of new claims by puritans to freedom as 'indepe...
The English Revolution of the mid-seventeenth century gave expression to the first major debates abo...
The problem of religious toleration dates back to the earliest days of history and though great stri...
The article deals with interconnection and close interlacing of religious and political issues in th...
Comparative analysis of the impact of religion on liberal political development is hampered by the p...
The eighteenth century in England has long been associated with increasing consumption, trade, luxur...
In eighteenth-century, Britain was experiencing success in international arena, increase in economic...
This thesis examines religious toleration dynamics from the perspective of a religious minority, the...
One of the defining features of the English Revolution is ‘its astonishing intellectual fertility’. ...
Richard Hooker and John Locke were important sources for the thought and public lives of Anglican le...
This work traces the theological origins and developments of dissenters from the Church of England w...
This study examines the development of theories of civil religion in Hanoverian Britain. In the afte...
This thesis blends social and intellectual history to argue that while Lord Baltimore's provision fo...
Includes indexes.Bibliography: v. [1], p. 421-477.[1] From the beginning of the English Reformation ...
Early modern political thought transformed toleration from a prudential consideration into a moral o...
The Puritans on Independence sheds light on the rise of new claims by puritans to freedom as 'indepe...
The English Revolution of the mid-seventeenth century gave expression to the first major debates abo...
The problem of religious toleration dates back to the earliest days of history and though great stri...
The article deals with interconnection and close interlacing of religious and political issues in th...
Comparative analysis of the impact of religion on liberal political development is hampered by the p...
The eighteenth century in England has long been associated with increasing consumption, trade, luxur...
In eighteenth-century, Britain was experiencing success in international arena, increase in economic...
This thesis examines religious toleration dynamics from the perspective of a religious minority, the...
One of the defining features of the English Revolution is ‘its astonishing intellectual fertility’. ...
Richard Hooker and John Locke were important sources for the thought and public lives of Anglican le...
This work traces the theological origins and developments of dissenters from the Church of England w...
This study examines the development of theories of civil religion in Hanoverian Britain. In the afte...
This thesis blends social and intellectual history to argue that while Lord Baltimore's provision fo...
Includes indexes.Bibliography: v. [1], p. 421-477.[1] From the beginning of the English Reformation ...
Early modern political thought transformed toleration from a prudential consideration into a moral o...
The Puritans on Independence sheds light on the rise of new claims by puritans to freedom as 'indepe...