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Informationen zum Autor Wayne Te Brake is Professor of History Emeritus at State University of New York, Purchase, and an affiliated faculty member of the Institute for Religion, Culture, and Public Life at Columbia University, New York. He is the author of Shaping History: Ordinary People in European Politics, 1500–1700 and Regents and Rebels: The Revolutionary World of an Eighteenth Century Dutch City, as well as a range of articles and book chapters on the comparative history of popular politics, religious contention, and revolution in early modern Europe. He has lectured extensively in both Europe and North America, and has taught an experimental, collaborative course on religion and politics at Koç University, Istanbul. Klappentext This work reassesses Europe's infamous religious wars through the history of religious peace before, during and after the wars. Zusammenfassung This work surveys Europe's infamous religious wars in order to offer a new understanding of the nature of religious peace - how it came into being and what it actually looked like. It will find a ready audience in advanced undergraduate and graduate courses on European history of the early modern period. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Religion and violence, war and peace; Part I. 1529-55: 2. Wars and rumors of war; 3. Managing conflict, validating diversity; 4. The contours of religious peace I: Central Europe; Part II. 1562-1609: 5. Religious war unleashed; 6. An elusive peace; 7. Ending war, shaping peace; 8. The contours of religious peace II: Western Europe; Part III. 1618-51: 9. Climax and denouement; 10. Grudging consent; 11. The contours of religious peace III: the Continent; 12. The contours of religious peace IV: Great Britain; Conclusion: 13. Envisioning religious peace; Bibliography; Index.