Venice and the Radical Reformation : : Italian Anabaptism and Antitrinitarianism in European Context / / Riccarda Suitner.
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Place / Publishing House: | Göttingen, Germany : : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht,, [2024] ©2024 |
Year of Publication: | 2024 |
Edition: | First edition. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Refo500 academic studies.
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Suitner, Riccarda, author. Venice and the Radical Reformation : Italian Anabaptism and Antitrinitarianism in European Context / Riccarda Suitner. First edition. Göttingen, Germany : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, [2024] ©2024 1 online resource (0 pages) text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Refo500 Academic Studies (R5AS) Intro -- Title page -- Copyright -- Table of Contents -- Body -- Acknowledgments -- List of illustrations -- Abbreviations -- 0. Introduction -- 0.1 The Venetian setting -- 0.2 Before Sozzini and the "Italian Heretics" -- 0.3 From Paduan medical milieux to pro-Judaism: the specificities of the Venetian Radical Reformation -- 0.4 The sources: a few preliminary observations -- 1. The landscape of dissent -- 1.1 Embracing the (Radical) Reformation in sixteenth-century Venice -- 1.1.1 The good citizen and the heterodox self -- 1.1.2 Becoming Anabaptist -- 1.1.3 Some figures -- 1.2 Places -- 1.2.1 The German Fondaco -- 1.2.2 Gardens, woods, universities, churches -- 1.2.3 Private houses -- 1.2.4 The collegia vicentina -- 1.2.5 Prisons -- 1.3 Punishing the Unknown -- 1.3.1 The danger of galleys -- 1.3.2 Rome and Venice: the two Inquisitions -- 1.3.3 From fine to death -- 1.3.4 Informers and inquisitors -- 1.3.5 The phantom defendants -- 1.4 The organisation of a new church -- 1.4.1 Points of reference: people and texts -- 1.4.2 A new lifestyle -- 1.4.3 The Carnival and its masks -- 1.4.4 The preparation of the council -- 2. In search of doctrinal uniformity -- 2.1 The meeting of 1550 -- 2.1.1 The Venetian confessions of faith: Anabaptism and Antitrinitarianism -- 2.1.2 Winners and losers -- 2.1.3 The Inquisition's perspective: barriers and ambiguity -- 2.2 The Italian way -- 2.2.1 The classic revisited: adult baptism -- 2.2.2 Venice and Moravia -- 2.2.3 The Lord's Supper and the imitatio Christi -- 2.2.4 Sin and Hell -- 2.3 Italian Anabaptists: isolated minority or international Reformers? -- 2.3.1 The mobility factor -- 2.3.2 A community of brothers and sisters -- 3. Radical Reformers at the University of Padua -- 3.1 Students and teachers -- 3.1.1 Medical students at the Facultas artistarum. 3.1.2 Cadaver dissections and conversations about religion -- 3.1.3 The diaspora of Paduan physicians -- 3.2 The Soul, the blood, and the Trinity -- 3.2.1 A medical theory of Incarnation -- 3.2.2 Servet and Padua -- 3.2.3 Agostino Doni and Servet -- 3.2.4 Constantino Tessera's doctrine on the soul -- 3.3 The sleeping souls -- 3.3.1 A forgotten doctrine -- 3.3.2 Mortalism and materialism -- 3.3.3 A literal or metaphorical meaning? -- 3.3.4 The Fifth Lateran Council -- 3.3.5 Venice and its surroundings -- 3.3.6 European echoes -- 4. Entangled religions -- 4.1 Germany, the Iberian Peninsula, Naples: Judaism and the Radical Reformation outside Venice -- 4.1.1 Judaism and Anabaptism in the German-speaking territories -- 4.1.2 Servet and Judaism -- 4.1.3 Juan de Valdés and the Naples-Venice connection -- 4.2 Entangled religions in a Renaissance Republic -- 4.2.1 Jews, conversos, radical Reformers -- 4.2.2 The cloistered nuns of Udine and their Jewish-Antitrinitarian utopia -- 4.2.3 The fascination of the Kabbalah -- 4.2.4 The University of Padua as a contact zone between Jews and radical Reformers -- 4.3 Venice, Poland and Transylvania -- 4.3.1 Continuing the theme -- 4.3.2 The supremacy of the Old Testament -- 4.4 Antitrinitarianism and Islam: from Venice to the East -- 4.4.1 Venetian 'heresy' and Muslim erudition -- 4.4.2 Prisoners and translators -- 5. Epilogue -- 5.1 The defeat -- 5.2 The Venetian Radical Reformation, Socinianism, and the Enlightenment -- Bibliography -- Manuscript sources -- Printed sources -- Secondary literature -- Index. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references and index. Reformation. Anabaptists Italy. Print version: Suitner, Riccarda Venice and the Radical Reformation Göttingen : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht,c2023 9783525500194 Refo500 academic studies. |
language |
English |
format |
eBook |
author |
Suitner, Riccarda, |
spellingShingle |
Suitner, Riccarda, Venice and the Radical Reformation : Italian Anabaptism and Antitrinitarianism in European Context / Refo500 Academic Studies (R5AS) Intro -- Title page -- Copyright -- Table of Contents -- Body -- Acknowledgments -- List of illustrations -- Abbreviations -- 0. Introduction -- 0.1 The Venetian setting -- 0.2 Before Sozzini and the "Italian Heretics" -- 0.3 From Paduan medical milieux to pro-Judaism: the specificities of the Venetian Radical Reformation -- 0.4 The sources: a few preliminary observations -- 1. The landscape of dissent -- 1.1 Embracing the (Radical) Reformation in sixteenth-century Venice -- 1.1.1 The good citizen and the heterodox self -- 1.1.2 Becoming Anabaptist -- 1.1.3 Some figures -- 1.2 Places -- 1.2.1 The German Fondaco -- 1.2.2 Gardens, woods, universities, churches -- 1.2.3 Private houses -- 1.2.4 The collegia vicentina -- 1.2.5 Prisons -- 1.3 Punishing the Unknown -- 1.3.1 The danger of galleys -- 1.3.2 Rome and Venice: the two Inquisitions -- 1.3.3 From fine to death -- 1.3.4 Informers and inquisitors -- 1.3.5 The phantom defendants -- 1.4 The organisation of a new church -- 1.4.1 Points of reference: people and texts -- 1.4.2 A new lifestyle -- 1.4.3 The Carnival and its masks -- 1.4.4 The preparation of the council -- 2. In search of doctrinal uniformity -- 2.1 The meeting of 1550 -- 2.1.1 The Venetian confessions of faith: Anabaptism and Antitrinitarianism -- 2.1.2 Winners and losers -- 2.1.3 The Inquisition's perspective: barriers and ambiguity -- 2.2 The Italian way -- 2.2.1 The classic revisited: adult baptism -- 2.2.2 Venice and Moravia -- 2.2.3 The Lord's Supper and the imitatio Christi -- 2.2.4 Sin and Hell -- 2.3 Italian Anabaptists: isolated minority or international Reformers? -- 2.3.1 The mobility factor -- 2.3.2 A community of brothers and sisters -- 3. Radical Reformers at the University of Padua -- 3.1 Students and teachers -- 3.1.1 Medical students at the Facultas artistarum. 3.1.2 Cadaver dissections and conversations about religion -- 3.1.3 The diaspora of Paduan physicians -- 3.2 The Soul, the blood, and the Trinity -- 3.2.1 A medical theory of Incarnation -- 3.2.2 Servet and Padua -- 3.2.3 Agostino Doni and Servet -- 3.2.4 Constantino Tessera's doctrine on the soul -- 3.3 The sleeping souls -- 3.3.1 A forgotten doctrine -- 3.3.2 Mortalism and materialism -- 3.3.3 A literal or metaphorical meaning? -- 3.3.4 The Fifth Lateran Council -- 3.3.5 Venice and its surroundings -- 3.3.6 European echoes -- 4. Entangled religions -- 4.1 Germany, the Iberian Peninsula, Naples: Judaism and the Radical Reformation outside Venice -- 4.1.1 Judaism and Anabaptism in the German-speaking territories -- 4.1.2 Servet and Judaism -- 4.1.3 Juan de Valdés and the Naples-Venice connection -- 4.2 Entangled religions in a Renaissance Republic -- 4.2.1 Jews, conversos, radical Reformers -- 4.2.2 The cloistered nuns of Udine and their Jewish-Antitrinitarian utopia -- 4.2.3 The fascination of the Kabbalah -- 4.2.4 The University of Padua as a contact zone between Jews and radical Reformers -- 4.3 Venice, Poland and Transylvania -- 4.3.1 Continuing the theme -- 4.3.2 The supremacy of the Old Testament -- 4.4 Antitrinitarianism and Islam: from Venice to the East -- 4.4.1 Venetian 'heresy' and Muslim erudition -- 4.4.2 Prisoners and translators -- 5. Epilogue -- 5.1 The defeat -- 5.2 The Venetian Radical Reformation, Socinianism, and the Enlightenment -- Bibliography -- Manuscript sources -- Printed sources -- Secondary literature -- Index. |
author_facet |
Suitner, Riccarda, |
author_variant |
r s rs |
author_role |
VerfasserIn |
author_sort |
Suitner, Riccarda, |
title |
Venice and the Radical Reformation : Italian Anabaptism and Antitrinitarianism in European Context / |
title_sub |
Italian Anabaptism and Antitrinitarianism in European Context / |
title_full |
Venice and the Radical Reformation : Italian Anabaptism and Antitrinitarianism in European Context / Riccarda Suitner. |
title_fullStr |
Venice and the Radical Reformation : Italian Anabaptism and Antitrinitarianism in European Context / Riccarda Suitner. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Venice and the Radical Reformation : Italian Anabaptism and Antitrinitarianism in European Context / Riccarda Suitner. |
title_auth |
Venice and the Radical Reformation : Italian Anabaptism and Antitrinitarianism in European Context / |
title_new |
Venice and the Radical Reformation : |
title_sort |
venice and the radical reformation : italian anabaptism and antitrinitarianism in european context / |
series |
Refo500 Academic Studies (R5AS) |
series2 |
Refo500 Academic Studies (R5AS) |
publisher |
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, |
publishDate |
2024 |
physical |
1 online resource (0 pages) |
edition |
First edition. |
contents |
Intro -- Title page -- Copyright -- Table of Contents -- Body -- Acknowledgments -- List of illustrations -- Abbreviations -- 0. Introduction -- 0.1 The Venetian setting -- 0.2 Before Sozzini and the "Italian Heretics" -- 0.3 From Paduan medical milieux to pro-Judaism: the specificities of the Venetian Radical Reformation -- 0.4 The sources: a few preliminary observations -- 1. The landscape of dissent -- 1.1 Embracing the (Radical) Reformation in sixteenth-century Venice -- 1.1.1 The good citizen and the heterodox self -- 1.1.2 Becoming Anabaptist -- 1.1.3 Some figures -- 1.2 Places -- 1.2.1 The German Fondaco -- 1.2.2 Gardens, woods, universities, churches -- 1.2.3 Private houses -- 1.2.4 The collegia vicentina -- 1.2.5 Prisons -- 1.3 Punishing the Unknown -- 1.3.1 The danger of galleys -- 1.3.2 Rome and Venice: the two Inquisitions -- 1.3.3 From fine to death -- 1.3.4 Informers and inquisitors -- 1.3.5 The phantom defendants -- 1.4 The organisation of a new church -- 1.4.1 Points of reference: people and texts -- 1.4.2 A new lifestyle -- 1.4.3 The Carnival and its masks -- 1.4.4 The preparation of the council -- 2. In search of doctrinal uniformity -- 2.1 The meeting of 1550 -- 2.1.1 The Venetian confessions of faith: Anabaptism and Antitrinitarianism -- 2.1.2 Winners and losers -- 2.1.3 The Inquisition's perspective: barriers and ambiguity -- 2.2 The Italian way -- 2.2.1 The classic revisited: adult baptism -- 2.2.2 Venice and Moravia -- 2.2.3 The Lord's Supper and the imitatio Christi -- 2.2.4 Sin and Hell -- 2.3 Italian Anabaptists: isolated minority or international Reformers? -- 2.3.1 The mobility factor -- 2.3.2 A community of brothers and sisters -- 3. Radical Reformers at the University of Padua -- 3.1 Students and teachers -- 3.1.1 Medical students at the Facultas artistarum. 3.1.2 Cadaver dissections and conversations about religion -- 3.1.3 The diaspora of Paduan physicians -- 3.2 The Soul, the blood, and the Trinity -- 3.2.1 A medical theory of Incarnation -- 3.2.2 Servet and Padua -- 3.2.3 Agostino Doni and Servet -- 3.2.4 Constantino Tessera's doctrine on the soul -- 3.3 The sleeping souls -- 3.3.1 A forgotten doctrine -- 3.3.2 Mortalism and materialism -- 3.3.3 A literal or metaphorical meaning? -- 3.3.4 The Fifth Lateran Council -- 3.3.5 Venice and its surroundings -- 3.3.6 European echoes -- 4. Entangled religions -- 4.1 Germany, the Iberian Peninsula, Naples: Judaism and the Radical Reformation outside Venice -- 4.1.1 Judaism and Anabaptism in the German-speaking territories -- 4.1.2 Servet and Judaism -- 4.1.3 Juan de Valdés and the Naples-Venice connection -- 4.2 Entangled religions in a Renaissance Republic -- 4.2.1 Jews, conversos, radical Reformers -- 4.2.2 The cloistered nuns of Udine and their Jewish-Antitrinitarian utopia -- 4.2.3 The fascination of the Kabbalah -- 4.2.4 The University of Padua as a contact zone between Jews and radical Reformers -- 4.3 Venice, Poland and Transylvania -- 4.3.1 Continuing the theme -- 4.3.2 The supremacy of the Old Testament -- 4.4 Antitrinitarianism and Islam: from Venice to the East -- 4.4.1 Venetian 'heresy' and Muslim erudition -- 4.4.2 Prisoners and translators -- 5. Epilogue -- 5.1 The defeat -- 5.2 The Venetian Radical Reformation, Socinianism, and the Enlightenment -- Bibliography -- Manuscript sources -- Printed sources -- Secondary literature -- Index. |
isbn |
3-666-50019-6 3-647-50019-4 9783525500194 |
callnumber-first |
B - Philosophy, Psychology, Religion |
callnumber-subject |
BR - Christianity |
callnumber-label |
BR305 |
callnumber-sort |
BR 3305.3 S858 42024 |
geographic_facet |
Italy. |
illustrated |
Illustrated |
dewey-hundreds |
200 - Religion |
dewey-tens |
270 - History of Christianity |
dewey-ones |
270 - History of Christianity & Christian church |
dewey-full |
270.6 |
dewey-sort |
3270.6 |
dewey-raw |
270.6 |
dewey-search |
270.6 |
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