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Strangers and exiles / Frederick A. Norwood
Titre : Strangers and exiles : a history of religious refugees Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Frederick A. Norwood (1914-1995), Auteur Editeur : Nashville, New York : Abingdon Press Année de publication : c1969 Importance : 2 volumes (496, 527 p.) Présentation : Illustrtions, maps Format : 25 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-0-687-39948-2 Note générale : Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
ISBN 0687399491 (Vol.1).- ISBN 0687399505 (Vol.2)Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Dissenters, Religious
Persecution -- History.
Religious refugeesIndex. décimale : BR 1601.2 Note de contenu : VOLUME 1 : I. FROM PHARAOH TO TORQUEMADA --
1. Roots in the Old Testament --
a. Nomadic wandering --
b. The exodus --
c. The exile --
2. Roots in the New Testament --
a. Apostolic refugees --
b. The parable of the great banquet --
c. The parable of the tares --
d. Advice in time of persecution --
3. From persecuted to persecutor --
a. The persecuted --
b. The persecutor --
4. Ancient Christian refugees --
a. Roman victims --
b. Arianism and its consequences --
c. Donatism in North Africa --
d. Churches of the East --
5. The Jewish Diaspora to 1492 --
a. The fall of Jerusalem --
b. The Diaspora --
c. Rise of Islam and a Jewish Golden Age --
d. Crusades and aftermath --
e. End of the Golden Age in Spain --
6. The Medieval church and inquisition --
a. The Catholic doctrine of the church --
b. Origins of the Medieval inquisition --
c. Form and procedure of the Medieval inquisition --
7. Medieval Christian refugees --
a. Forerunners of the Cathari --
b. The Cathari --
c. Waldenses to the Bull of 1487 --
d. Lollards and Hussites --
II. FROM WORMS TO VERSAILLES (1517-1685) --
8. Religious liberty in the Reformation --
a. Tolerance and intolerance in Catholic humanism --
b. The mainline Reformers --
c. The radical Reformers --
d. Anglicanism and Nascent Puritanism --
e. Some famous books --
9. Wars of religion --
a. The empire (Holy and Roman) --
b. Turmoil in France --
c. Spain and the Inquisition --
d. The struggle for freedom in the Netherlands --
e. East Central Europe --
f. Obits --
10. Protestant refugees in sixteenth-century England --
a. Early developments --
b. Under Edward VI --
c. Flight in time of Mary --
d. Return under Elizabeth --
11. The strangers' "model churches" in sixteenth-century England --
a. The establishment --
b. The model church --
c. Premature demise --
12. The Reformed on the continent --
a. The nature of the movements --
b. Low countries and the Lower Rhine --
c. Middle Rhineland --
d. Upper Rhineland --
e. From France to Switzerland --
f. From Italy to Switzerland --
13. The Marian Exiles --
14. The Reformation refugees and European society --
a. England: earning a living and mutual help --
b. London and Norwich --
c. Germany: economic activity --
d. Frankfurt, Hanau, and Frankenthal --
e. Switzerland --
f. The social impact of the religious refugees --
15. Roman Catholics --
a. Early beginnings --
b. The Elizabethan settlement --
c. Elizabeth and political Catholicism --
d. Epilogue --
16. Radical Reformers --
a. General considerations --
b. From Switzerland down the Rhine and Danube --
c. To, in, and from the Netherlands --
d. South German lands --
e. Moravia --
f. East around the Vistula --
g. Other areas --
h. Free spirits in East Central Europe --
17. Denominationalism and religious liberty --
a. Early essays --
b. Commonwealth experiments --
c. Restoration settlements --
18. Oppression and enlightenment --
a. The Thirty Years' War --
b. The Waldenses to the Piedmontese Easter --
c. The reasonableness of Christianity --
d. The Wesleyan synthesis --
III. MAPS --
The biblical world --
The wandering Jew in the Middle Ages --
The refugee crescent --
East Central Europe. VOLUME 2 : III. FROM OLD WORLD TO NEW WORLD --
19. Jews in and out of the Ghetto, 1492-1914 --
a. Sephardic Jews after 1492; the Ghetto --
b. Ashkenazi Jews in Eastern Europe --
c. Jews in modern times --
20. The Huguenots of the Dispersion --
a. From Nantes to Fontainebleau, 1598-1685 --
b. The revocation of the Edict of Nantes --
21. The dispersion of the Huguenots --
a. The Netherlands --
b. Switzerland --
c. England --
d. Ireland and Scotland --
e. The Rhineland --
f. Brandenburg --
g. Scandinavia and East Europe --
h. Around the world --
i. Conclusions on influence and importance --
22. Waldenses of the Glorious Return --
a. The Great Persecution --
b. The emigration to Switzerland --
c. In exile --
d. The Glorious Return --
e. Later history --
23. The Salzburgers --
a. Beginnings --
b. Seventeenth century --
c. Eighteenth century --
24. Mennonites to 1914 --
a. Migrations from Switzerland --
b. Upper Rhine and Danube --
c. North Germany and the Baltic --
d. Russia --
e. The Hutterites --
25. The Alexanderwohl Mennonite Migration --
a. West Prussia --
b. South Russia --
c. Midwest America --
26. Western Catholics and the East --
a. The Russian Orthodox --
b. Roman Catholics in the French Revolution --
27. Opening of the New World --
a. Refuge of the saints in New England --
b. Goats in the sheepfold --
c. Huguenots in the New World --
d. Waldenses in America --
28. Immigrants and refugees in America --
a. Colonial movements --
b. Nineteenth-century migrations from Europe --
c. The Mormon migration --
IV. FROM ROVING REFUGEES TO MIGRATING MASSES --
29. Age of disruption --
a. The novelty of the twentieth century --
b. Global migration --
30. World War I and the aftermath --
a. Greeks and Turks --
b. Armenians --
c. Assyrians --
d. Russians --
31. Victims of totalitarianism --
a. Response to the need --
b. Fascism and Nazism --
c. The Spanish Civil War --
d. World War II --
32. Europe after World War II --
a. Aftermath --
b. Developing organization: UNRRA, IGCR, and IRO --
c. The Hungarian Revolution --
d. World Refugee Year --
e. In recent years --
33. The Near East --
a. Early movements and Turkey --
b. Israel --
c. Arabs-refugees from refugees --
34. The Far East --
a. South Asia --
b. East Asia --
35. Dispersion around the world --
a. Agencies for resettlement --
b. Sowing of the seed --
c. Recent continuing movements --
36. Refugees for conscience' sake --
a. The faithful among the masses --
b. Christian seed still scattered --
c. The Mennonites --
37. The church is there --
a. Voluntary agencies --
b. An international interdenominational agency --
the WCC Division of inter-church aid and service to refugees --
c. Interdenominational agencies in separate countries --
d. Denominational agencies --
38. The land of Nod, east of Eden --
a. The refugee individual --
b. The refugee church --
V. Maps --
Dispersion of the Huguenots --
The Waldenses --
The Salzburgers --
The spread of the Swiss Mennonites --
The spread of the Dutch Mennonites --
The Near East --
Distribution of the Jews --
Mennonite migration: 1923-30 --
Mennonite migration: World War II.Strangers and exiles : a history of religious refugees [texte imprimé] / Frederick A. Norwood (1914-1995), Auteur . - Nashville, New York : Abingdon Press, c1969 . - 2 volumes (496, 527 p.) : Illustrtions, maps ; 25 cm.
ISBN : 978-0-687-39948-2
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
ISBN 0687399491 (Vol.1).- ISBN 0687399505 (Vol.2)
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Dissenters, Religious
Persecution -- History.
Religious refugeesIndex. décimale : BR 1601.2 Note de contenu : VOLUME 1 : I. FROM PHARAOH TO TORQUEMADA --
1. Roots in the Old Testament --
a. Nomadic wandering --
b. The exodus --
c. The exile --
2. Roots in the New Testament --
a. Apostolic refugees --
b. The parable of the great banquet --
c. The parable of the tares --
d. Advice in time of persecution --
3. From persecuted to persecutor --
a. The persecuted --
b. The persecutor --
4. Ancient Christian refugees --
a. Roman victims --
b. Arianism and its consequences --
c. Donatism in North Africa --
d. Churches of the East --
5. The Jewish Diaspora to 1492 --
a. The fall of Jerusalem --
b. The Diaspora --
c. Rise of Islam and a Jewish Golden Age --
d. Crusades and aftermath --
e. End of the Golden Age in Spain --
6. The Medieval church and inquisition --
a. The Catholic doctrine of the church --
b. Origins of the Medieval inquisition --
c. Form and procedure of the Medieval inquisition --
7. Medieval Christian refugees --
a. Forerunners of the Cathari --
b. The Cathari --
c. Waldenses to the Bull of 1487 --
d. Lollards and Hussites --
II. FROM WORMS TO VERSAILLES (1517-1685) --
8. Religious liberty in the Reformation --
a. Tolerance and intolerance in Catholic humanism --
b. The mainline Reformers --
c. The radical Reformers --
d. Anglicanism and Nascent Puritanism --
e. Some famous books --
9. Wars of religion --
a. The empire (Holy and Roman) --
b. Turmoil in France --
c. Spain and the Inquisition --
d. The struggle for freedom in the Netherlands --
e. East Central Europe --
f. Obits --
10. Protestant refugees in sixteenth-century England --
a. Early developments --
b. Under Edward VI --
c. Flight in time of Mary --
d. Return under Elizabeth --
11. The strangers' "model churches" in sixteenth-century England --
a. The establishment --
b. The model church --
c. Premature demise --
12. The Reformed on the continent --
a. The nature of the movements --
b. Low countries and the Lower Rhine --
c. Middle Rhineland --
d. Upper Rhineland --
e. From France to Switzerland --
f. From Italy to Switzerland --
13. The Marian Exiles --
14. The Reformation refugees and European society --
a. England: earning a living and mutual help --
b. London and Norwich --
c. Germany: economic activity --
d. Frankfurt, Hanau, and Frankenthal --
e. Switzerland --
f. The social impact of the religious refugees --
15. Roman Catholics --
a. Early beginnings --
b. The Elizabethan settlement --
c. Elizabeth and political Catholicism --
d. Epilogue --
16. Radical Reformers --
a. General considerations --
b. From Switzerland down the Rhine and Danube --
c. To, in, and from the Netherlands --
d. South German lands --
e. Moravia --
f. East around the Vistula --
g. Other areas --
h. Free spirits in East Central Europe --
17. Denominationalism and religious liberty --
a. Early essays --
b. Commonwealth experiments --
c. Restoration settlements --
18. Oppression and enlightenment --
a. The Thirty Years' War --
b. The Waldenses to the Piedmontese Easter --
c. The reasonableness of Christianity --
d. The Wesleyan synthesis --
III. MAPS --
The biblical world --
The wandering Jew in the Middle Ages --
The refugee crescent --
East Central Europe. VOLUME 2 : III. FROM OLD WORLD TO NEW WORLD --
19. Jews in and out of the Ghetto, 1492-1914 --
a. Sephardic Jews after 1492; the Ghetto --
b. Ashkenazi Jews in Eastern Europe --
c. Jews in modern times --
20. The Huguenots of the Dispersion --
a. From Nantes to Fontainebleau, 1598-1685 --
b. The revocation of the Edict of Nantes --
21. The dispersion of the Huguenots --
a. The Netherlands --
b. Switzerland --
c. England --
d. Ireland and Scotland --
e. The Rhineland --
f. Brandenburg --
g. Scandinavia and East Europe --
h. Around the world --
i. Conclusions on influence and importance --
22. Waldenses of the Glorious Return --
a. The Great Persecution --
b. The emigration to Switzerland --
c. In exile --
d. The Glorious Return --
e. Later history --
23. The Salzburgers --
a. Beginnings --
b. Seventeenth century --
c. Eighteenth century --
24. Mennonites to 1914 --
a. Migrations from Switzerland --
b. Upper Rhine and Danube --
c. North Germany and the Baltic --
d. Russia --
e. The Hutterites --
25. The Alexanderwohl Mennonite Migration --
a. West Prussia --
b. South Russia --
c. Midwest America --
26. Western Catholics and the East --
a. The Russian Orthodox --
b. Roman Catholics in the French Revolution --
27. Opening of the New World --
a. Refuge of the saints in New England --
b. Goats in the sheepfold --
c. Huguenots in the New World --
d. Waldenses in America --
28. Immigrants and refugees in America --
a. Colonial movements --
b. Nineteenth-century migrations from Europe --
c. The Mormon migration --
IV. FROM ROVING REFUGEES TO MIGRATING MASSES --
29. Age of disruption --
a. The novelty of the twentieth century --
b. Global migration --
30. World War I and the aftermath --
a. Greeks and Turks --
b. Armenians --
c. Assyrians --
d. Russians --
31. Victims of totalitarianism --
a. Response to the need --
b. Fascism and Nazism --
c. The Spanish Civil War --
d. World War II --
32. Europe after World War II --
a. Aftermath --
b. Developing organization: UNRRA, IGCR, and IRO --
c. The Hungarian Revolution --
d. World Refugee Year --
e. In recent years --
33. The Near East --
a. Early movements and Turkey --
b. Israel --
c. Arabs-refugees from refugees --
34. The Far East --
a. South Asia --
b. East Asia --
35. Dispersion around the world --
a. Agencies for resettlement --
b. Sowing of the seed --
c. Recent continuing movements --
36. Refugees for conscience' sake --
a. The faithful among the masses --
b. Christian seed still scattered --
c. The Mennonites --
37. The church is there --
a. Voluntary agencies --
b. An international interdenominational agency --
the WCC Division of inter-church aid and service to refugees --
c. Interdenominational agencies in separate countries --
d. Denominational agencies --
38. The land of Nod, east of Eden --
a. The refugee individual --
b. The refugee church --
V. Maps --
Dispersion of the Huguenots --
The Waldenses --
The Salzburgers --
The spread of the Swiss Mennonites --
The spread of the Dutch Mennonites --
The Near East --
Distribution of the Jews --
Mennonite migration: 1923-30 --
Mennonite migration: World War II.Réservation
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