Zwingliana
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Acta of the Synod of Dordt, hg. von Donald Sinnema, Christian Moser und Herman J. Selderhuis, 2015
No abstract available
Registres du Consistoire de Genève au temps de Calvin, Bd. 7 & 8, hg. von Isabella M. Watt und Jeffrey R. Watt, Genf 2013/2014
Eine Konferenz zur sozialen Frage in Basel 1869
Basle 1869. The growing industrial proletariat starts to mobilise against bad social conditions. Politically and religiously conservative factory owners hold a conference with town missionaries and clergy to seek ways of alleviating the social malaise. They urge a Christianisation of the industry based on a theological conception that emphasises the experience of individual grace. However, they fail to see the social roots of the human misery. As a result, despite all good intentions, no suitable solution can be found for the various problems
L’expe´rience de la diffe´rence religieuse dans l’Europe moderne, hg. von Bertrand Forclaz, 2013
No abstract available
Vom Karpatenbecken zum Rheinknie: Eine Quellenanalyse zu den Beziehungen der ungarländischen reformierten Kollegien in Debrecen und Sárospatak zur Universität Basel im 18. Jahrhundert
Among the countries belonging to the Holy Crown of Saint Stephen in the 18th century, Hungary and Transylvania were governed as separate administrative units because Habsburg rulers did not unite the original state formation of integer Hungary that had been disintegrated in the 16th century. Therefore, the protestant churches had to cope with different situations in the Habsburg monarchy, among which this study focuses only on the Hungarian situation. In the Age of Enlightenment the Reformed Church had two centres of education in Hungary (Debrecen and Sárospatak), which achieved the college level, but did not reach the level of a university. Consequently, Western European universities had a highly significant role in the education of Calvinist intellectuals, as the Hungarian students could attain a university level education only at these institutions. The University of Basel was particularly important for Hungarian students in the 18th century because one third of the overall number of students consisted of only Hungarians at certain periods. Moreover, one could even observe a moderate competition among students arriving in Switzerland from the Debrecen and Sárospatak Colleges respectively, as the professors of both institutions lobbied for scholarships at Basel. This study pre-eminently investigates this process, while also examining the Hungarian relations of book publications in Basel