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This edited collection brings national and religious narratives into conversation with each other, helping readers to formulate a more sophisticated comprehension of the social and cultural factors involved in the religious tolerance and intolerance that has taken place in Europe and western Asia, and continues today. Bringing together scho
Table des matières
Introduction
Katsumi Fukasawa
Part I. Christendom divided: dilemmas of coexistence, attempts at dialogue
1 Crossing confessional frontiers in the sixteenth century: Frenchmen before the Italian Inquisition
Alain Tallon
2 Between Protestants and Catholics: Proposals for the establishment of universal peace and toleration
Miriam Eliav-Feldon
3 Sympathy for the secret society: The Family of Love, Humanists, and Guillaume Postel.
Taihei Yamamoto
4 God's vengeance and forgiveness for enemies: A new perspective on the Anabaptist contribution to the development of religious toleration and reconciliation in early modern Europe
Tomoji Odori
5 Do good fences make good neighbours? Living with heretics in early modern Savoy
Graeme Murdock
6 Religious conflict and community in early modern Ireland: The Presbyterian Question
Robert Armstrong
7 ‘When in Rome…’: Religious practice by Anglicans on the Continent in the 17th and early 18th centuries
Sugiko Nishikawa
8 Religious printed material: actor and witness of inter-faith rivalries in south-west France in the seventeenth century
Éric Suire
9 Port-Royalists as a catalyst for the inter-confessional dialogues in seventeenth-century France
Masanori Sakano
10 Protestants in the French Navy before and after the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes: Political and social questions
Martine Acerra
11 Can erudite friendship break down inter-confessional barriers and promote ecumenical dialogue? The case of the correspondence of Cardinal Querini, Bishop of Brescia, with the pastors of the French Reformed churches of Prussia in the 18th century
Pierre-Yves Beaurepaire
12 ‘In death they are not divided’: The Irish
A propos de l'auteur
Katsumi Fukasawa is Emeritus Professor at the University of Tokyo and Visiting Professor of European history at Kyoto-Sangyo University, both in Japan.
Benjamin J. Kaplan is Professor of Dutch History (Chair) at University College London, UK.
Pierre-Yves Beaurepaire is Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, France, and Fellow of the ‘Institut Universitaire de France’.
Résumé
This edited collection brings national and religious narratives into conversation with each other, helping readers to formulate a more sophisticated comprehension of the social and cultural factors involved in the religious tolerance and intolerance that has taken place in Europe and western Asia, and continues today. Bringing together scho