Reformation and the practice of toleration : Dutch religious history in the early modern era /
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Main Author: | |
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Corporate Author: | |
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Leiden ; Boston :
Brill,
[2019]
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Series: | St. Andrews studies in Reformation history,
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Connect to this title online (unlimited simultaneous users allowed; 325 uses per year) |
Table of Contents:
- Machine generated contents note: 1. "Remnants of the Papal Yoke": Apathy and Opposition in the Dutch Reformation
- 2. Hubert Duifhuis and the Nature of Dutch Libertinism
- 3. Dutch Particularism and the Calvinist Quest for "Holy Uniformity"
- 4. Confessionalism and Its Limits: Religion in Utrecht, 1600-1650
- 5. Clash of Values: The Survival of Utrecht's Confraternities after the Reformation and the Debate over Their Dissolution
- 6. Possessed by the Devil? A Very Public Dispute in Utrecht
- 7. Fictions of Privacy: House Chapels and the Spatial Accommodation of Religious Dissent in Early Modern Europe
- 8. "Dutch" Religious Tolerance: Celebration and Revision
- 9. Muslims in the Dutch Golden Age: Representations and Realities of Religious Toleration
- 10. "In Equality and Enjoying the Same Favour": Biconfessionalism in the Low Countries
- 11. Religious Encounters in the Borderlands of Early Modern Europe: The Case of Vaals
- 12. "For They Will Turn Away Thy Sons": The Practice and Perils of Mixed Marriage in the Dutch Golden Age
- 13. Integration vs. Segregation: Religiously Mixed Marriage and the "Verzuiling" Model of Dutch Society
- 14. Intimate Negotiations: Husbands and Wives of Opposing Faiths in Eighteenth-Century Holland.