Description

Book Synopsis
Early modern Central Europe was the continent's most decentralized region politically and its most diverse ethnically and culturally. With the onset of the Reformation, it also became Europe's most religiously divided territory and potentially its most explosive in terms of confessional conflict and war...

Trade Review

This volume gives a good, comparative insight into the construction of denominational affiliations, the inter-denominational understanding and the conflicts in political and everyday life in Central Europe. · Zeitschrift für Historische Forschung



Table of Contents

List of Figures
Preface

Introduction:Between Conflict and Concord: The Challenge of Religious Diversity in Central Europe
Howard Louthan

Chapter 1. Constructing and Crossing Confessional Boundaries: The High Nobility and the Reformation of Bohemia
Petr Maťa

Chapter 2. Religious Toleration in Sixteenth Century Poland: Political Realities and Social Constraints
Paul W. Knoll

Chapter 3. Customs of Confession: Managing Religious Diversity in Late Sixteenth- and Early Seventeenth-Century Westphalia
David M. Luebke

Chapter 4. Cuius region, eius religio: The ambivalent meanings of state building in Protestant Germany, 1555-1655
Robert von Friedeburg

Chapter 5. The Entropy of Coercion in the Holy Roman Empire: Jews, Heretics, Witches
Thomas A. Brady, Jr.

Chapter 6. Conflict and Concord in Early Modern Poland: Catholics and Orthodox at the Union of Brest
Mikhail V. Dmitriev

Chapter 7. Confessionalization and the Jews: Impacts and Parallels in the City of Strasbourg
Debra Kaplan

Chapter 8. Mary “triumphant over demons and also heretics”: Religious symbols and confessional uniformity in Catholic Germamy
Bridget Heal

Chapter 9. Heresy and Literacy in the Eighteenth-century Habsburg Monarchy
Regina Pörtner

Chapter 10. Union, Reunion, or Toleration? Reconciliatory Attempts among Eighteenth-century Protestants
Alexander Schunka

Chapter 11. Confessional Uniformity, Toleration, Freedom of Religion: An Issue for Enlightened Absolutism in the Eighteenth Century
Ernst Wangermann

Notes on Contributors
Select Bibliography

Figures

Figure 1. Master of St. Severin rosary altar
Figure 2. Rosary image, Cologne
Figure 3. Bartolomäus Bruyn the Elder, Tryptich
Figure 4. Sixteenth-century panels, Virign and Child
Figure 5. Arrival of Gustav Adolph, Augsbury 1632
Figure 6. Altarpiece, Parish Church, Sebes, c. 1524-6

Diversity and Dissent

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    A Hardback by Gary B. Cohen, Franz A. J. Szabo

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      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 3/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780857451088, 978-0857451088
      ISBN10: 0857451081

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Early modern Central Europe was the continent's most decentralized region politically and its most diverse ethnically and culturally. With the onset of the Reformation, it also became Europe's most religiously divided territory and potentially its most explosive in terms of confessional conflict and war...

      Trade Review

      This volume gives a good, comparative insight into the construction of denominational affiliations, the inter-denominational understanding and the conflicts in political and everyday life in Central Europe. · Zeitschrift für Historische Forschung



      Table of Contents

      List of Figures
      Preface

      Introduction:Between Conflict and Concord: The Challenge of Religious Diversity in Central Europe
      Howard Louthan

      Chapter 1. Constructing and Crossing Confessional Boundaries: The High Nobility and the Reformation of Bohemia
      Petr Maťa

      Chapter 2. Religious Toleration in Sixteenth Century Poland: Political Realities and Social Constraints
      Paul W. Knoll

      Chapter 3. Customs of Confession: Managing Religious Diversity in Late Sixteenth- and Early Seventeenth-Century Westphalia
      David M. Luebke

      Chapter 4. Cuius region, eius religio: The ambivalent meanings of state building in Protestant Germany, 1555-1655
      Robert von Friedeburg

      Chapter 5. The Entropy of Coercion in the Holy Roman Empire: Jews, Heretics, Witches
      Thomas A. Brady, Jr.

      Chapter 6. Conflict and Concord in Early Modern Poland: Catholics and Orthodox at the Union of Brest
      Mikhail V. Dmitriev

      Chapter 7. Confessionalization and the Jews: Impacts and Parallels in the City of Strasbourg
      Debra Kaplan

      Chapter 8. Mary “triumphant over demons and also heretics”: Religious symbols and confessional uniformity in Catholic Germamy
      Bridget Heal

      Chapter 9. Heresy and Literacy in the Eighteenth-century Habsburg Monarchy
      Regina Pörtner

      Chapter 10. Union, Reunion, or Toleration? Reconciliatory Attempts among Eighteenth-century Protestants
      Alexander Schunka

      Chapter 11. Confessional Uniformity, Toleration, Freedom of Religion: An Issue for Enlightened Absolutism in the Eighteenth Century
      Ernst Wangermann

      Notes on Contributors
      Select Bibliography

      Figures

      Figure 1. Master of St. Severin rosary altar
      Figure 2. Rosary image, Cologne
      Figure 3. Bartolomäus Bruyn the Elder, Tryptich
      Figure 4. Sixteenth-century panels, Virign and Child
      Figure 5. Arrival of Gustav Adolph, Augsbury 1632
      Figure 6. Altarpiece, Parish Church, Sebes, c. 1524-6

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