The Oxford Handbook of the Protestant Reformations
Herausgeber: Rublack, Ulinka
The Oxford Handbook of the Protestant Reformations
Herausgeber: Rublack, Ulinka
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This Handbook takes a broad overview of the Protestant Reformations, seeing them as movements which stretched far beyond their European beginnings. Written by a team of international scholars of history and theology, the contributions offer up-to-date perspectives on Reformation ideas and the lasting historical impact of Protestantism.
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This Handbook takes a broad overview of the Protestant Reformations, seeing them as movements which stretched far beyond their European beginnings. Written by a team of international scholars of history and theology, the contributions offer up-to-date perspectives on Reformation ideas and the lasting historical impact of Protestantism.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press (UK)
- Seitenzahl: 848
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. August 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 168mm x 48mm
- Gewicht: 1474g
- ISBN-13: 9780198845966
- ISBN-10: 0198845960
- Artikelnr.: 56743650
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Oxford University Press (UK)
- Seitenzahl: 848
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. August 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 168mm x 48mm
- Gewicht: 1474g
- ISBN-13: 9780198845966
- ISBN-10: 0198845960
- Artikelnr.: 56743650
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Ulinka Rublack is a Professor at the University of Cambridge and has published widely on early modern European history as well as approaches to history. She has edited, most recently, The Oxford Concise Companion to History (2011). Her monographs include The Astronomer and the Witch: Johannes Kepler's Fight for his Mother (2015); Reformation Europe (2005); The Crimes of Women in Early Modern Germany (1999); and Dressing Up: Cultural Identity in Renaissance Europe (2010), which won the Roland H. Bainton Prize.
* 1: Ulinka Rublack: Introduction
* Part I: The New Theology
* 2: Christopher Ocker: Explaining Evil and Grace
* 3: Alec Ryrie: The Nature of Spiritual Experience
* 4: Robin Barnes: Reforming Time
* 5: Glenn Burgess: Political Obedience
* Part II: Geographies and Varieties of the Reformations
* 6: Graeme Murdoch: Geographies of the Protestant Reformation
* 7: Howard Louthan: The Bohemian Reformations
* 8: Thomas Kaufmann: Luther and Lutheranism
* 9: Randolph Head: The Swiss Reformations: Movements, Settlements, and
Re-Imagination, 1520-1720
* 10: C. Scott Dixon: The Radicals
* 11: Mack P. Holt: Calvin and Reformed Protestantism
* 12: Felicity Heal: The English, Scottish and Irish Reformations
* 13: Philip Soergel: Protestantism in the Age of Catholic Renewal
* 14: Andrew Gow and Jeremy Fradkin: Protestantism and non-Christian
Religions
* 15: Howard Hotson: Outsiders, Dissenters and Competing Visions of
Reform
* 16: Ulrike Gleixner: Pietism
* 17: Mark Häberlein: Protestantism Outside Europe
* Part III: Communicating the Reformations
* 18: Andrew Pettegree: Print Workshops and Markets
* 19: Helmut Puff: The Word
* 20: Susan Karant Nunn: The Reformation of Liturgy
* 21: Mark Greengrass: An "Epistolary Reformation ": The Role and
Significance of Letters in the First Century of the Protestant
Reformation
* Part IV: Sites, Institutions, and Society
* 22: Michael Heyd: University Scholars of the Reformation
* 23: Charlotte Methuen: Education and Understandings of Social
Hierarchy
* 24: Joel Harrington: Legal Courts
* 25: Beat Kumin: Rural Society
* 26: Guido Marnef: Civic Religions
* 27: Ronald Asch: The European Nobilities and the Reformation
* Part V: Identities and Cultural Meanings of the Reformations
* 28: Craig Koslofsky: Explaining Change
* 29: Bridget Heal: Visual and Material Culture
* 30: Christopher Boyd-Brown: Music
* 31: Herman Roodenburg: The Body in the Reformations
* 32: Kathleen M. Crowther: Sexual Difference
* 33: Ute Lotz-Heumann: The Natural and Supernatural
* 34: Christine R. Johnson: Commerce and Consumption
* 35: Alisha Rankin: Natural Philosophy
* Part VI: Assessing the Reformations
* 36: Merry Wiesner-Hanks: Comparisons and Consequences in Global
Perspective, 1500-1750
* 37: Bruce Gordon: History and Memory
* Part I: The New Theology
* 2: Christopher Ocker: Explaining Evil and Grace
* 3: Alec Ryrie: The Nature of Spiritual Experience
* 4: Robin Barnes: Reforming Time
* 5: Glenn Burgess: Political Obedience
* Part II: Geographies and Varieties of the Reformations
* 6: Graeme Murdoch: Geographies of the Protestant Reformation
* 7: Howard Louthan: The Bohemian Reformations
* 8: Thomas Kaufmann: Luther and Lutheranism
* 9: Randolph Head: The Swiss Reformations: Movements, Settlements, and
Re-Imagination, 1520-1720
* 10: C. Scott Dixon: The Radicals
* 11: Mack P. Holt: Calvin and Reformed Protestantism
* 12: Felicity Heal: The English, Scottish and Irish Reformations
* 13: Philip Soergel: Protestantism in the Age of Catholic Renewal
* 14: Andrew Gow and Jeremy Fradkin: Protestantism and non-Christian
Religions
* 15: Howard Hotson: Outsiders, Dissenters and Competing Visions of
Reform
* 16: Ulrike Gleixner: Pietism
* 17: Mark Häberlein: Protestantism Outside Europe
* Part III: Communicating the Reformations
* 18: Andrew Pettegree: Print Workshops and Markets
* 19: Helmut Puff: The Word
* 20: Susan Karant Nunn: The Reformation of Liturgy
* 21: Mark Greengrass: An "Epistolary Reformation ": The Role and
Significance of Letters in the First Century of the Protestant
Reformation
* Part IV: Sites, Institutions, and Society
* 22: Michael Heyd: University Scholars of the Reformation
* 23: Charlotte Methuen: Education and Understandings of Social
Hierarchy
* 24: Joel Harrington: Legal Courts
* 25: Beat Kumin: Rural Society
* 26: Guido Marnef: Civic Religions
* 27: Ronald Asch: The European Nobilities and the Reformation
* Part V: Identities and Cultural Meanings of the Reformations
* 28: Craig Koslofsky: Explaining Change
* 29: Bridget Heal: Visual and Material Culture
* 30: Christopher Boyd-Brown: Music
* 31: Herman Roodenburg: The Body in the Reformations
* 32: Kathleen M. Crowther: Sexual Difference
* 33: Ute Lotz-Heumann: The Natural and Supernatural
* 34: Christine R. Johnson: Commerce and Consumption
* 35: Alisha Rankin: Natural Philosophy
* Part VI: Assessing the Reformations
* 36: Merry Wiesner-Hanks: Comparisons and Consequences in Global
Perspective, 1500-1750
* 37: Bruce Gordon: History and Memory
* 1: Ulinka Rublack: Introduction
* Part I: The New Theology
* 2: Christopher Ocker: Explaining Evil and Grace
* 3: Alec Ryrie: The Nature of Spiritual Experience
* 4: Robin Barnes: Reforming Time
* 5: Glenn Burgess: Political Obedience
* Part II: Geographies and Varieties of the Reformations
* 6: Graeme Murdoch: Geographies of the Protestant Reformation
* 7: Howard Louthan: The Bohemian Reformations
* 8: Thomas Kaufmann: Luther and Lutheranism
* 9: Randolph Head: The Swiss Reformations: Movements, Settlements, and
Re-Imagination, 1520-1720
* 10: C. Scott Dixon: The Radicals
* 11: Mack P. Holt: Calvin and Reformed Protestantism
* 12: Felicity Heal: The English, Scottish and Irish Reformations
* 13: Philip Soergel: Protestantism in the Age of Catholic Renewal
* 14: Andrew Gow and Jeremy Fradkin: Protestantism and non-Christian
Religions
* 15: Howard Hotson: Outsiders, Dissenters and Competing Visions of
Reform
* 16: Ulrike Gleixner: Pietism
* 17: Mark Häberlein: Protestantism Outside Europe
* Part III: Communicating the Reformations
* 18: Andrew Pettegree: Print Workshops and Markets
* 19: Helmut Puff: The Word
* 20: Susan Karant Nunn: The Reformation of Liturgy
* 21: Mark Greengrass: An "Epistolary Reformation ": The Role and
Significance of Letters in the First Century of the Protestant
Reformation
* Part IV: Sites, Institutions, and Society
* 22: Michael Heyd: University Scholars of the Reformation
* 23: Charlotte Methuen: Education and Understandings of Social
Hierarchy
* 24: Joel Harrington: Legal Courts
* 25: Beat Kumin: Rural Society
* 26: Guido Marnef: Civic Religions
* 27: Ronald Asch: The European Nobilities and the Reformation
* Part V: Identities and Cultural Meanings of the Reformations
* 28: Craig Koslofsky: Explaining Change
* 29: Bridget Heal: Visual and Material Culture
* 30: Christopher Boyd-Brown: Music
* 31: Herman Roodenburg: The Body in the Reformations
* 32: Kathleen M. Crowther: Sexual Difference
* 33: Ute Lotz-Heumann: The Natural and Supernatural
* 34: Christine R. Johnson: Commerce and Consumption
* 35: Alisha Rankin: Natural Philosophy
* Part VI: Assessing the Reformations
* 36: Merry Wiesner-Hanks: Comparisons and Consequences in Global
Perspective, 1500-1750
* 37: Bruce Gordon: History and Memory
* Part I: The New Theology
* 2: Christopher Ocker: Explaining Evil and Grace
* 3: Alec Ryrie: The Nature of Spiritual Experience
* 4: Robin Barnes: Reforming Time
* 5: Glenn Burgess: Political Obedience
* Part II: Geographies and Varieties of the Reformations
* 6: Graeme Murdoch: Geographies of the Protestant Reformation
* 7: Howard Louthan: The Bohemian Reformations
* 8: Thomas Kaufmann: Luther and Lutheranism
* 9: Randolph Head: The Swiss Reformations: Movements, Settlements, and
Re-Imagination, 1520-1720
* 10: C. Scott Dixon: The Radicals
* 11: Mack P. Holt: Calvin and Reformed Protestantism
* 12: Felicity Heal: The English, Scottish and Irish Reformations
* 13: Philip Soergel: Protestantism in the Age of Catholic Renewal
* 14: Andrew Gow and Jeremy Fradkin: Protestantism and non-Christian
Religions
* 15: Howard Hotson: Outsiders, Dissenters and Competing Visions of
Reform
* 16: Ulrike Gleixner: Pietism
* 17: Mark Häberlein: Protestantism Outside Europe
* Part III: Communicating the Reformations
* 18: Andrew Pettegree: Print Workshops and Markets
* 19: Helmut Puff: The Word
* 20: Susan Karant Nunn: The Reformation of Liturgy
* 21: Mark Greengrass: An "Epistolary Reformation ": The Role and
Significance of Letters in the First Century of the Protestant
Reformation
* Part IV: Sites, Institutions, and Society
* 22: Michael Heyd: University Scholars of the Reformation
* 23: Charlotte Methuen: Education and Understandings of Social
Hierarchy
* 24: Joel Harrington: Legal Courts
* 25: Beat Kumin: Rural Society
* 26: Guido Marnef: Civic Religions
* 27: Ronald Asch: The European Nobilities and the Reformation
* Part V: Identities and Cultural Meanings of the Reformations
* 28: Craig Koslofsky: Explaining Change
* 29: Bridget Heal: Visual and Material Culture
* 30: Christopher Boyd-Brown: Music
* 31: Herman Roodenburg: The Body in the Reformations
* 32: Kathleen M. Crowther: Sexual Difference
* 33: Ute Lotz-Heumann: The Natural and Supernatural
* 34: Christine R. Johnson: Commerce and Consumption
* 35: Alisha Rankin: Natural Philosophy
* Part VI: Assessing the Reformations
* 36: Merry Wiesner-Hanks: Comparisons and Consequences in Global
Perspective, 1500-1750
* 37: Bruce Gordon: History and Memory