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LEADER 00000cam 22005898i 4500
001 on1411033254
003 OCoLC
005 20240202213016.0
006 m o d
007 cr |||||||||||
008 231120s2024 nyu ob 001 0 eng
010 2023034977
020 9781805431626|q(epub)
020 9781805431619|q(pdf)
035 (OCoLC)1411033254
037 22573/cats10733864|bJSTOR
040 DLC|beng|erda|cDLC|dOCLCO|dJSTOR|dOCLCO
042 pcc
043 e------|ae-ne---
049 CKEA
050 00 BX9476.E8515
082 00 284/.2492094309031|223/eng/20231122
100 1 Spohnholz, Jesse,|d1974-|eauthor.
245 10 Dutch Reformed Protestants in the Holy Roman Empire,
c.1550-1620 :|ba Reformation of refugees /|cJesse
Spohnholz and Mirjam van Veen.
263 2402
264 1 Rochester, NY :|bUniversity of Rochester Press,|c2024.
300 1 online resource.
336 text|btxt|2rdacontent
337 computer|bc|2rdamedia
338 online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier
347 data file|2rda
490 1 Changing perspectives on early modern Europe,|x1542-3905 ;
|v23
504 Includes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 Leaving home -- Foreign accommodations -- Strangers and
neighbors -- Managing worship -- Living in diaspora --
Returning and remembering.
520 "Examines the diverse experiences of Reformed Protestant
religious refugees fleeing war and persecution in the
Netherlands for cities and towns in the Holy Roman Empire
in the late sixteenth century. Starting in the mid-
sixteenth century, widespread persecution and war forced
tens of thousands of Reformed Protestants in the
Netherlands to flee their homes for new communities in
England and the Holy Roman Empire. This book follows those
refugees who escaped to large cities and small towns to
the east and southeast, up the Rhine River watershed. The
comprehensive approach taken here examines these forced
migrations from political, intellectual, social, cultural,
religious, and linguistic perspectives, including using a
large prosopographical database to track refugees'
movements and experiences. It challenges scholars' claims
that Reformed Protestants developed more doctrinal,
volunteeristic, and well-organized churches particularly
capable of surviving the challenges of persecution and
exile. Instead, the authors show, refugees proved
remarkably willing to compromise and adapt, even as they
built new relationships with the unfamiliar people they
met abroad. Based on an extensive collaboration between
two senior scholars with different training and
intellectual backgrounds and the team of researchers they
led, this book challenges conventional wisdom about
refugees and forced migrations in early modern Europe.
This book is based on research conducted as part of a
project funded by the Dutch Research Council (NWO), titled
"The Rhineland Exiles and the Religious Landscape of the
Dutch Republic, c.1550-1618. This title is available under
the Creative Commons license CC-BY-NC-ND"--|cProvided by
publisher.
588 Description based on print version record and CIP data
provided by publisher; resource not viewed.
650 0 Religious refugees|zHoly Roman Empire.
650 0 Religious refugees|zNetherlands.
650 0 Dutch|zHoly Roman Empire|xReligious life and customs.
650 0 Intergroup relations|zHoly Roman Empire.
650 0 Reformed (Reformed Church)|zHoly Roman Empire.
650 7 RELIGION / History.|2bisacsh
651 0 Holy Roman Empire|xChurch history|y16th century.
700 1 Veen, Mirjam van,|eauthor.
776 08 |iPrint version:|aSpohnholz, Jesse, 1974-|tDutch Reformed
Protestants in the Holy Roman Empire, c.1550-1620
|dRochester, NY : University of Rochester Press, 2024
|z9781648250767|w(DLC) 2023034976
830 0 Changing perspectives on early modern Europe.|x1542-3905 ;
|v23.
914 on1411033254
947 MARCIVE Processed 2024/05/08
994 92|bCKE