The return of the Flemish humanist Justus Lipsius (1547–1606) to the Spanish Netherlands and his reconciliation with Catholicism (1591) have defined his image for posterity. Debates about the sincerity of Lipsius' religious beliefs have continued to the present day. Scholars have presented Lipsius' departure from Leiden as the result of external pressure, as effortless, and conducted in secret. By contrast, this article shows that Lipsius' public engagement in the Republic of Letters was instrumental in enabling his reconciliation with Catholicism. Lipsius employed both published and private letters and the rhetoric of friendship to win support for his return to the Southern Netherlands. After his arrival, Lipsius' correspondence and friend...
This book presents a critical edition of the Latin letters in ms. G3 (Uppsala University Library) fr...
Decades of burgeoning humanism, intensifying lay piety, and an increasing anticlerical sentiment, pa...
While Marvell’s letters provide an invaluable resource for Marvell’s life and milieu, they also must...
The return of the Flemish humanist Justus Lipsius (1547–1606) to the Spanish Netherlands and his rec...
J. de Landtsheer, J. Lipsius, Iusti Lipsi epistolae, VIII, 1595 'Inner peace and wisdom under a lig...
Abstract This essay offers an introduction to Justus Lipsius’s dialogue De Constantia, first publish...
Recent scholarship has advanced paradoxical conclusions about the relationship between Renaissance h...
The last letter of Justus Lipsius to Ascanio Colonna: the virtuous qualities of Philip Rubens, the r...
In this essay I would like to put to test the hypothesis that the late XVIth century dispute about r...
In the 1570s the structure of the Catholic Church had collapsed in the Dutch Republic, but soon afte...
Lactantius's treatise De mortibus persecutorum, which celebrates the end of the persecutions of Chri...
Philip of Marnix, one of the most famous Dutch refugees, is best known as an efficient and prolific ...
Of Erasmus’s many scholarly controversies, his exchange with Martin Luther about the freedom of the ...
In 1583, David Chytraeus (1530–1600), one of the key figures of north German Protestant humanism, pu...
This article discusses one of Lewkenor's more obscure works, The Resolved Gentleman (1594 - STC 1513...
This book presents a critical edition of the Latin letters in ms. G3 (Uppsala University Library) fr...
Decades of burgeoning humanism, intensifying lay piety, and an increasing anticlerical sentiment, pa...
While Marvell’s letters provide an invaluable resource for Marvell’s life and milieu, they also must...
The return of the Flemish humanist Justus Lipsius (1547–1606) to the Spanish Netherlands and his rec...
J. de Landtsheer, J. Lipsius, Iusti Lipsi epistolae, VIII, 1595 'Inner peace and wisdom under a lig...
Abstract This essay offers an introduction to Justus Lipsius’s dialogue De Constantia, first publish...
Recent scholarship has advanced paradoxical conclusions about the relationship between Renaissance h...
The last letter of Justus Lipsius to Ascanio Colonna: the virtuous qualities of Philip Rubens, the r...
In this essay I would like to put to test the hypothesis that the late XVIth century dispute about r...
In the 1570s the structure of the Catholic Church had collapsed in the Dutch Republic, but soon afte...
Lactantius's treatise De mortibus persecutorum, which celebrates the end of the persecutions of Chri...
Philip of Marnix, one of the most famous Dutch refugees, is best known as an efficient and prolific ...
Of Erasmus’s many scholarly controversies, his exchange with Martin Luther about the freedom of the ...
In 1583, David Chytraeus (1530–1600), one of the key figures of north German Protestant humanism, pu...
This article discusses one of Lewkenor's more obscure works, The Resolved Gentleman (1594 - STC 1513...
This book presents a critical edition of the Latin letters in ms. G3 (Uppsala University Library) fr...
Decades of burgeoning humanism, intensifying lay piety, and an increasing anticlerical sentiment, pa...
While Marvell’s letters provide an invaluable resource for Marvell’s life and milieu, they also must...