USING THE CASE OF EARLY-SIXTEENTH-CENTURY ANTWERP, ARGUES THAT
PRACTICES OF RELIGIOUS TOLERATION IN THE CHRISTIAN WEST FIRST EMERGED
NOT AS THE OUTGROWTH OF BELIEFS ABOUT HUMAN RIGHTS, BUT AS A PRACTICAL
CONSEQUENCE OF RELIGIOUS COEXISTENCE.
In a modern world still struggling to achieve religious coexistence,
there has been a recent burgeoning of scholarship aimed at examining
the history of such coexistence. Most of these studies focus on
developments in the seventeenth century and beyond. This book
redirects attention earlier, to the first half of the sixteenth
century, and argues that impulses to toleration were already at work
even amid the religious upheaval of the European Reformations.In the
early modern metropolis of Antwerp, the author finds a wealthy
merchant city struggling to balance the competing interests of
municipality and empire. While their imperial overlords attempted to
impose religious uniformityvia increasingly repressive anti-heresy
edicts, the city fathers of Antwerp found ways to circumvent those
laws in order to accommodate the religious heterodoxy of their most
valued inhabitants. The result was the development of pragmatically
tolerant practices that arose in the service of fundamentally
nonreligious motivations.
Via a series of case studies, this book documents the development of
such practices on the part of the Antwerp fathersas they defended
their heterodox inhabitants. It seeks to understand the motivations
underlying the councilors' lenient treatment of heterodoxy in their
city, and attempts to answer the question of how we are to understand
such pragmatically tolerant behavior as part of the broader history of
religious tolerance in the Christian West.
Victoria Christman is associate professor of history at Luther
College.
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The Politics of Religious Heterodoxy in Early Reformation Antwerp, 1515-1555
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781580468787
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Ingram Publisher Services UK- Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter