Detalls del llibre
Covering the entire European system and its relations with the East and America, this first global history of tolerance in early modern Europe describes how the ideal of tolerance and its realisation transformed both the religious and political life of the modern world.
In the sixteenth century, Christianity was split apart by the Lutheran revolt, a fracture which would become a political one. Erasmus, Castellion, and the Socinians defended the freedom of conscience and of faith, and the right to belong to a heretical church. The violent political clashes in France, Holland and Great Britain seemed to make the latter impossible, as the relationship between religion and politics was at the centre of those conflicts. The theory of a new politics was devised by Hobbes and developed by Spinoza and Locke: Sovereignty was not to be religious but secular, and tolerance would become civil liberty. A Cultural History of Tolerance shows how political power and religious doctrine together shaped both persecution and emerging ideas of tolerance, laying the groundwork for later debates.
This book is intended for professors, academic researchers, students, and general readers interested in early modern Europe, political ideas, and the history of religion.
- Autors Lucia. Felici, Girolamo (Ed.) Imbruglia
- ISBN13 9781032835358
- ISBN10 1032835354
- Pàgines 298
- Any Edició 2025
- Fecha de publicación 11/12/2025
Ressenyes i valoracions
A Cultural History of Tolerance Ideas, Conflicts, and Protagonists
- De
- Lucia. Felici, Girolamo (Ed.) Imbruglia
- |
- ROUTLEDGE (2025)
- 9781032835358



