© francesco quatrini, 2021This essay focuses on the presence of Polish Brethren (usually known as Socinians) exiles in Amsterdam in the mid-seventeenth century, examining the social and intellectual interrelations between them and other Dutch religious minorities. It describes the phenomenon of the Brethren's emigration to the United Provinces, roughly between 1638 (when the Socinians were banished from Raków) and the late 1660s, relying on both published and manuscript sources. It particularly emphasizes the social relations that the Brethren established with the Remonstrants, the Mennonites, and the Collegiants. It then focuses on the last group and argues that shared views on religious tolerance were the common intellectual ground that l...
Mecca and Amsterdam is a work of Christian theological ethics. It is, in essence, a theological res...
The debate about toleration occasioned by the condemnation, exile and later return of the Remonstran...
This thesis analyses how and why the Westminster Assembly (1643-1653), the Long Parliament’s adviso...
© francesco quatrini, 2021This essay focuses on the presence of Polish Brethren (usually known as So...
The Polish Brethren, usually known as Socinians, were perhaps the most infamous Christian sect belon...
The Polish Brethren, usually known as Socinians, were perhaps the most infamous Christian sect belon...
In the popular imagination, seventeenth-century Amsterdam was an oasis of religious toleration in a ...
During the past decades, the study of religious tolerance has shifted from its earlier focus on phil...
This volume about religious tolerance in early modern Brazil comprises two articles. Jonathan Israel...
Polish Toleration or the Beginning of the Enlightenment? Jonasz Szlichtyng (1592‑1661) as Theologian...
In 1664, Elector Karl I Ludwig, Count Palatine of the Rhine decreed a General Concession granting th...
In the seventeenth century, some conversos living throughout Western Europe, who had been either tra...
Amsterdam created a unique Jewish culture in which the study of Scripture was a central focus of edu...
International audienceAdvocates of toleration and freedom of conscience during the long seventeenth ...
This essay surveys the wave of new literature on early modern migration and assesses its impact on t...
Mecca and Amsterdam is a work of Christian theological ethics. It is, in essence, a theological res...
The debate about toleration occasioned by the condemnation, exile and later return of the Remonstran...
This thesis analyses how and why the Westminster Assembly (1643-1653), the Long Parliament’s adviso...
© francesco quatrini, 2021This essay focuses on the presence of Polish Brethren (usually known as So...
The Polish Brethren, usually known as Socinians, were perhaps the most infamous Christian sect belon...
The Polish Brethren, usually known as Socinians, were perhaps the most infamous Christian sect belon...
In the popular imagination, seventeenth-century Amsterdam was an oasis of religious toleration in a ...
During the past decades, the study of religious tolerance has shifted from its earlier focus on phil...
This volume about religious tolerance in early modern Brazil comprises two articles. Jonathan Israel...
Polish Toleration or the Beginning of the Enlightenment? Jonasz Szlichtyng (1592‑1661) as Theologian...
In 1664, Elector Karl I Ludwig, Count Palatine of the Rhine decreed a General Concession granting th...
In the seventeenth century, some conversos living throughout Western Europe, who had been either tra...
Amsterdam created a unique Jewish culture in which the study of Scripture was a central focus of edu...
International audienceAdvocates of toleration and freedom of conscience during the long seventeenth ...
This essay surveys the wave of new literature on early modern migration and assesses its impact on t...
Mecca and Amsterdam is a work of Christian theological ethics. It is, in essence, a theological res...
The debate about toleration occasioned by the condemnation, exile and later return of the Remonstran...
This thesis analyses how and why the Westminster Assembly (1643-1653), the Long Parliament’s adviso...