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Dutch Reformed Protestants in the Holy Roman Empire, c.1550–1620
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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...
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13 February 2024

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 but complementary intellectual backgrounds—one a European trained in theology and intellectual history and the other a North American with expertise in social and cultural history—and the team of researchers they led, this book challenges conventional wisdom about refugees and forced migrations in early modern Europe.
Upon publication, this book is openly available in digital formats thanks to generous funding from the Dutch Research Council.
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 but complementary intellectual backgrounds—one a European trained in theology and intellectual history and the other a North American with expertise in social and cultural history—and the team of researchers they led, this book challenges conventional wisdom about refugees and forced migrations in early modern Europe.
Upon publication, this book is openly available in digital formats thanks to generous funding from the Dutch Research Council.
Price: $36.95
Pages: 326
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: University of Rochester Press
Publication Date:
13 February 2024
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781648250767
Format: Paperback
BISACs:
RELIGION / History, Religion and politics, RELIGION / Christianity / Protestant, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Refugees, Religious intolerance, persecution and conflict, Protestantism and Protestant Churches, Migration, immigration and emigration, Refugees and political asylum
This valuable study makes a significant contribution to analysis of the complex relationship between early Calvinism and the experience of exile. Spohnholz and van Veen conclude that the long-term significance of these diverse migrant communities lies not so much with any causal role they played in shaping the Dutch Reformed Church in the sixteenth century but rather in how memories about this period of heroic exile later came to be understood within the Reformed tradition in the Dutch Republic.
Figures and Tables
Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Leaving Home
2. Foreign Accommodations
3. Strangers and Neighbors
4. Managing Worship
5. Living in Diaspora
6. Returning and Remembering
Afterword
Bibliography
Index
Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Leaving Home
2. Foreign Accommodations
3. Strangers and Neighbors
4. Managing Worship
5. Living in Diaspora
6. Returning and Remembering
Afterword
Bibliography
Index