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Ecclesia Reformata Volume II
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In comparison with volume I (1972) the author has extended the scope of the term 'Reformation'. In this book the term indicates the sum of religious, social and political reforms which presented th...
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01 January 1994

In comparison with volume I (1972) the author has extended the scope of the term 'Reformation'. In this book the term indicates the sum of religious, social and political reforms which presented themselves as a result of work of the reformers of the 16th century.
After giving consideration to Luther and particularly to Calvin in part I, attention is paid in part II to the development and the distinctive nature of the Reformation in the Northern Netherlands, with an accent on the variety of Dutch Calvinism.
Published as Kerkhistorische Bijdragen, Ecclesia Reformata, vol. 2
After giving consideration to Luther and particularly to Calvin in part I, attention is paid in part II to the development and the distinctive nature of the Reformation in the Northern Netherlands, with an accent on the variety of Dutch Calvinism.
Published as Kerkhistorische Bijdragen, Ecclesia Reformata, vol. 2
Price: $168.00
Pages: 326
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Ecclesia Reformata
Publication Date:
01 January 1994
ISBN: 9789004094659
Format: Other
'This is a scholarship of the first water, brilliant.'
Bibliothèque d'Humanisme et Renaissance, 1995.
'[This] study is important not only for Cologne but also as one of the first great social studies of criminality in Germany because of the methodology used to reach his conclusions and to fit a city into its larger context.'
Gerald Chaix, Sixteenth Century Journal, 1995.
'This is a fine collection of essays by a skilled historian and a warm-hearted churchman. English-speaking readers have reason to be grateful that they are now available in translation.'
John L. Thompson, Zwingliana, 1995.
'This is a groundbreaking piece, which should fundamentally influence our understanding of Calvin's political thought and its capacity for development in the face of events.'
Andrew Pettegree, Ecclesiastical History, 1995.
Bibliothèque d'Humanisme et Renaissance, 1995.
'[This] study is important not only for Cologne but also as one of the first great social studies of criminality in Germany because of the methodology used to reach his conclusions and to fit a city into its larger context.'
Gerald Chaix, Sixteenth Century Journal, 1995.
'This is a fine collection of essays by a skilled historian and a warm-hearted churchman. English-speaking readers have reason to be grateful that they are now available in translation.'
John L. Thompson, Zwingliana, 1995.
'This is a groundbreaking piece, which should fundamentally influence our understanding of Calvin's political thought and its capacity for development in the face of events.'
Andrew Pettegree, Ecclesiastical History, 1995.
Willem Nijenhuis is professor emeritus of Church History at the University of Groningen. His works include Calvinus Oecumenicus: Calvin and the Unity of the Church in his Correspondence (1959, in Dutch), Ecclesia Reformata. Studies on the Reformation Vol. I (1972), Adrianus Saravia (c. 1532-1613). Dutch Calvinist, first Reformed defender of the English episcopal church order on the basis of the ius divinum (1980), Matthew Slade 1569-1628. Letters to the English Ambassador (1986). He wrote many articles on the Reformation and the German Church Struggle in the Nazi period.