Between State and Church
Confessional Relations from Reformation to Enlightenment: Poland – Lithuania – Germany – Netherlands
Abstract
The different theoretical notions and practices of the relations between the state and religious communities in early modern Europe constitute one of the most interesting problems in historiography. Moving away from a simple «toleration» versus «non-toleration» dichotomy, the author sets out to analyse the inter-confessional relations in selected European territories in a «longue duree» perspective, between Reformation and Enlightenment. Outlining the relations between the state and the different Churches (confessions) in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Holy Roman Empire of Germany, and the Northern Netherlands serves to highlight the specificity of Northern Netherlands serves to highlight the specificity of «free» (non-absolutist) composite states, where the particularly complex process of defining the raison d’etat determined the level of religious toleration that was politically feasible and socially acceptable.
Keywords
Church; Church-state relations; Confessional; Denominational relations; Enlightenment; Germany; Humanist and political theory; Kriegseisen; Lithuania; Netherlands; Poland; Protestant and Catholic reformers; Reform; Reformation; Relations; StateDOI
10.3726/978-3-653-02375-6ISBN
9783653023756, 9783653999013, 9783653999020, 9783631626702, 9783653023756Publisher website
https://www.peterlang.com/Publication date and place
Bern, 2016Series
Polish Studies – Transdisciplinary Perspectives, 16Classification
History and Archaeology
c 1500 onwards to present day
Politics and government