The institutional Catholic Church in seventeenth-century Amsterdam relied on the work of inspired women who lived under an informal religious rule and called themselves ‘spiritual daughters’. Once the States of Holland banned all public exercise of Catholicism, spiritual daughters leveraged the ambiguity of their religious status to pursue unique roles in their communities as catechists, booksellers and enthusiastic consumers of print. However, their lack of a formal order caused consternation among their Catholic confessors. It also disturbed Reformed authorities in their communities, who branded them ‘Jesuitesses’. Whilst many scholars have documented this tension between inspired daughter and institutional critique, it has yet to be cont...
This chapter examines the importance of books, reading and writing for Catholic women after the Refo...
This dissertation explores the ways literate members of the Dutch Republic deployed a discourse abou...
This thesis outlines two distinct modes of early sixteenth-century devotional practice (image-based...
The institutional Catholic Church in seventeenth-century Amsterdam relied on the work of inspired wo...
Literary Lifelines deals with the practice of interconfessional exchange in the literary domain of t...
This article engages with the overriding tendency to see cultural hybridity as a progressive force i...
In the first instance, the thesis explores ideas about women published in incunables (ca. 1450-1501)...
Catechisms and schoolbooks were essential tools for Catholics living in partibus infidelium, ‘in the...
Previous studies of radical thinkers have brought us few examples of female radicals from the Low Co...
Previous studies of radical thinkers have brought us few examples of female radicals from the Low Co...
For religious subcultures, the reading of religious books was of great importance, even for Roman Ca...
This project is the first to analyze the known corpus of seventeenth-century Dutch ministerial libra...
Pollmann, Judith, Catholic Identity and the Revolt of the Netherlands 1520-1635 (Past and Present; O...
This article deals with women's contribution to the book production in the Low Countries in the 14th...
This article discusses the issue of a female patronage in the 17th century Dutch Republic. Three cas...
This chapter examines the importance of books, reading and writing for Catholic women after the Refo...
This dissertation explores the ways literate members of the Dutch Republic deployed a discourse abou...
This thesis outlines two distinct modes of early sixteenth-century devotional practice (image-based...
The institutional Catholic Church in seventeenth-century Amsterdam relied on the work of inspired wo...
Literary Lifelines deals with the practice of interconfessional exchange in the literary domain of t...
This article engages with the overriding tendency to see cultural hybridity as a progressive force i...
In the first instance, the thesis explores ideas about women published in incunables (ca. 1450-1501)...
Catechisms and schoolbooks were essential tools for Catholics living in partibus infidelium, ‘in the...
Previous studies of radical thinkers have brought us few examples of female radicals from the Low Co...
Previous studies of radical thinkers have brought us few examples of female radicals from the Low Co...
For religious subcultures, the reading of religious books was of great importance, even for Roman Ca...
This project is the first to analyze the known corpus of seventeenth-century Dutch ministerial libra...
Pollmann, Judith, Catholic Identity and the Revolt of the Netherlands 1520-1635 (Past and Present; O...
This article deals with women's contribution to the book production in the Low Countries in the 14th...
This article discusses the issue of a female patronage in the 17th century Dutch Republic. Three cas...
This chapter examines the importance of books, reading and writing for Catholic women after the Refo...
This dissertation explores the ways literate members of the Dutch Republic deployed a discourse abou...
This thesis outlines two distinct modes of early sixteenth-century devotional practice (image-based...