Personification of the Reformation in the 18th century

Richter, S.
Personifikatsiya Reformatsii v XVIII v. [Personification of the Reformation in the 18th century], in: Proslogion: Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Social History and Culture, 2018. Vol. 4 (1). P. 123138.

Susan Richter, doctor of History, professor, Department of History, Heidelberg University (69117, Germany, Heidelberg, Grabengasse 3–5; aud. 229)

Language: Russian

It is thanks to the Augsburgian copperplate engraver Jeremias Wachsmuth (1711–1771) that an emblematical figure of reformation has been handed down to us in 1758. Wachsmuth, in turn, complies with Cesare Ripa’s (1555–1622) riforma which the latter coined in his Iconologia overo Descrittione Dell’imagini Universali cavate dall’Antichità et da altri luoghi in order to anthropomorphically make goals, means, and actors of reform more graspable and more easily explicable, respectively.
Revealing itself in the form of a young woman, Wachstmuth’s reformation holds a billhook in its right hand. Serving as an horticultural tool especially in wine-growing regions, it is applied to the present day, for instance, in the act of fruit tree pruning. In this context, its functions as the perfect instrument for carefully cutting off back dead or diseased branches. The underlying idea is to control growth and stimulate the expected yield. Ripa correspondingly assigns to his personified Riforma both an example of a diseased and a healthy branch, each resulting from a particular course of action: on the one hand, the flourishing branch as the result of a reforming trim, the diseased one, on the other hand, as the outcome of ignorance and a refusal of acting. The knife, accordingly, symbolizes the principle of renasci (renewal) or, alternatively, the idea of revirescere (regreening and regaining strength). Thus, the billhook, in horticultural life, is supposed to assist a well-informed professional. The fashion how Wachsmuth puts this symbolic tool into use, provides guidance to a particular exegesis. For carrying out a correction of the status quo and striving for a change to the better, it is most certainly necessary to have suitable instruments at one’s disposal.
The ensemble consisting of book and billhook additionally indicates the necessity of able key actors being bestowed with faith, knowledge, courage, legitimacy, and, being of the utmost importance, agency. It is thus hardly surprising that the caption precisely hints at such an actor: The biblical king Josiah (647 BC – 609 BC, Destruit Iosias iustus, Simulacra Deorum, Rex populusque ferunt, pectora pura Deo) who is detectable in two scenes in the background of the picture. On the left side, sitting on his throne and internalizing the Divine Laws and, on the right side, acting correspondingly.

Key Words: Correction, Emblematical figure, Personification, Reformation, Reform

URL: http://proslogion.ru/41-richter/

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Die Begegnung Russlands mit dem lutherischen Protestantismus im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert

Angermann, N. Die Begegnung Russlands mit dem lutherischen Protestantismus im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert, in: Proslogion: Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Social History and Culture, 2018. Vol. 4 (1). P. 101122.

Norbert Angermann, doctor of History, professor emeritus, Historical seminar of the Hamburg University (20148, Germany, Hamburg, Mittelweg 177)

Language: Russian

This article looks at the presence of the Lutheran Protestantism in Russia from the Middle of the 16th century to 1689, the year of the accession to power of Peter the Great. The main attention is focused on the beginning of the Lutheran-Orthodox contacts. The author stresses the role of trade and the relationships between Russia and Livonia. Already on the eve of the Livonian war (before 1558) in Pskov there was a little parish of Russian Protestants, probably formed as a result of trade between Pskov and Dorpat. In the whole time under observation the Lutherans formed the biggest group of the Western foreigners in Muscovy. The author speaks about the services of the Lutheran military men, doctors, interpreters and other specialists for Russia. Above all owing to the utility of these persons the government gave to them a far-reaching religious freedom. With regard to the allowance of the Lutheran faith Muscovy had behind other European countries.

Key Words: Moscow, Ivan the Terribble, Lutherans, Reformation, heresy, tolerance

URL: http://proslogion.ru/41-angermann/

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Royal Officials in Reformation France: Is it Easy to be a Huguenot?

Altukhova, N. I. Frantsuzskie chinovniki v epokhu Reformatsii: Legko li byt’ gugenotom? [Royal Officials in Reformation France: Is It Easy to Be a Huguenot?], in: Proslogion: Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Social History and Culture, 2018. Vol. 4 (1). P. 84100.

Natalia Ivanovna Altukhova, research fellow, Institute of World History, Russian Academy of Sciences (119334, Rossiya, Moskva, Leninskiy prospekt, 32A), scientific assistant, Ecclesiastical Research Centre «Orthodox Encyclopedia» (105120, Rossiya, Moskva, Nizhnyaya Syromyatnicheskaya ulitsa, 10A, building 1)

Language: Russian

The article deals with the practice of venality (vénalité des offices) in France during the Wars of Religion in the second half of the sixteenth century. During that period the adherents of the so-called «reformed religion» could obtain or lose the opportunity to acquire and to perform royal offices, depending on whether hostilities prevailed or a peace was concluded — on conditions either favourable to the Huguenots or depriving them of the rights received during the previous war. The article examines steps taken to prevent «the heretics» from serving «the most Christian king» (oath of allegiance to the Catholic religion, testimonies of «a Catholic way of life», certificates from Catholic priests) as well as the royal legislation against Huguenot officials. While addressing Edicts of Pacification (édits de pacification), it is possible to reveal, on the one hand, the pendulum-like nature of royal commands, switching between prohibition and permission for Huguenots to acquire and to dispose of royal offices; on the other hand, a gradual, if very slow, process of obtainment by the Huguenots of the right not only to appeal to the Catholic king for justice, but also to participate in the work of financial and judicial institutions, executing offices acquired through the department of casual revenues (caisse des parties casuelles). The development of legal venality excluded the possibility to deprive owners, whether Calvinists or Catholics, of their offices without financial reimbursement. The implementation of anti-Huguenot edicts was thus delayed by the lack of money in the royal treasury. However, the Huguenots themselves, fearing for their lives and property, often preferred to conceal their relationship with «the so-called Reformers».

Key Words: French Wars of Religion, venality of offices, officials, Edicts of Pacification, Huguenots, France, sixteenth century

URL: http://proslogion.ru/41-altuhova/

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Reformation and Nobility in Bohemian Lands

Bůžek, V. Reformatsiya i dvoryanstvo v cheshskikh zemlyakh [Reformation and Nobility in Bohemian Lands], in: Proslogion: Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Social History and Culture, 2018. Vol. 4 (1). P. 4669.

Václav Bůžek, doctor of History, professor, University of České Budějovice (370 05, Czech Republic, České Budějovice, Branišovská 1645/31A, České Budějovice 2)

Language: Russian

With respect to the Hussite revolution and its consequences for religious and political conditions the course of Reformation in Bohemian Lands showed unique features. The restoration of faith and individual choice of confession were there offered within approved Utraquism far into the half of 16th century and also by the Unity of the Brethren (Bohemian Brethren) which was supported by noble authorities in spite of being banned by the monarch. The early Lutheran Reformation in North Bohemia took place on manors owned by the noble families of Schlicks, Salhausens and later also Knights of Bünau where the population was mostly German-speaking and the authorities used their patronage rights to support its progression. In South Bohemia, there played a similar role the Ungnads of Sonneck who came from Styria and Carinthia. However, it is not possible to specify the confessional boundary between the Utraquism and Lutheranism without further research. The right to a personal choice of faith regardless to social status of the believer was in Bohemia granted after the failure of so-called Bohemian Confession 1575 by the publication of Letter of Majesty for religious freedom in 1609. Its breaches from the side of the king and his Catholic estates lead to the Bohemian Revolt between years 1618–1620. This period of religious tolerance ended in Bohemian Lands very soon after the defeat of reformation followers — namely Utraquists, Lutherans and Bohemian Brethren — in the battle of White Mountain. According to the Renewed Provincial Constitution (1627–1628), there was declared Roman Catholic as the only allowed confession.

Key Words: Schlicks, Salhausens, von Bünau, Maestat, Utraquists, Bohemian Brethren, Rudolph II, Anabaptists, Jan Hus, Martin Luther

URL: http://proslogion.ru/41-buzek/

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Elector Otto Henry as Defender of the Reformation in the Duchy of Neuburg and in Electoral Palatinate

Roth, M. Kurfyurst Otto Genrikh kak zashchitnik Reformatsii v gertsogstve Noyburg i v Kurpfal’tse [Elector Otto Henry as Defender of the Reformation in the Duchy of Neuburg and in Electoral Palatinate], in: Proslogion: Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Social History and Culture, 2018. Vol. 4 (1). P. 2145.

Michael Roth, assistant lecturer, Department of History, Heidelberg University (69117, Germany, Heidelberg, Grabengasse 3–5; aud. 229)

Language: Russian

This article deals with the implementation of Lutheranism in Palatinate-Neuburg and in Electoral Palatinate by prince elector Ottheinrich (1502–1556) in an administrative and dynastical perspective. It asks how the prince tried to establish step by step the new Protestant order and doctrine in his two inherited territories with Church Orders that ended the confessional state of uncertainty in favour of Lutheranism. Ottheinrich acted as deeply religious monarch within the Holy Roman Empire and established diplomatic contacts to the French and English royal courts so that he became one of the most important opponents of the imperial policy. In spite of his short reign as prince elector he determined the political role of the Electoral Palatinate for the next decades in the complex confessional situation in the Holy Roman Empire.

Key Words: Reformation, Electoral Palatinate, Palatinate-Neuburg, Church Orders, prince elector Ottheinrich, Holy Roman Empire

URL: http://proslogion.ru/41-roth/

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Das Prämonstratenserkloster Belbuck als eine Keimzelle der Reformation im südlichen Ostseeraum

Ehricht, Ch. Das Prämonstratenserkloster Belbuck als eine Keimzelle der Reformation im südlichen Ostseeraum, in: Proslogion: Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Social History and Culture, 2018. Vol. 4 (1). P. 720.

Christoph Ehricht, Arbeitsgemeinschaft für pommersche Kirchengeschichte e.V. (17489, Germany, Greifswald, c/o Landeskirchliches Archiv, Rudolf-Petershagen-Allee 3)

Language: Deutsch

The article «The Prämonstratensian Monastery in Belbuck — a Starting Point of Reformation in the Southern Baltic Sea Region» studies the role of the monastery in Belbuck near Treptow an der Rega in the former duchy Pomerania (today Bialoboki/Trzebiatow in Zapadny pomorze/West Pomerania/Poland) that was founded in the end of the 12th century by Premonstratensians from Lund. In the beginning of the 16th century there worked some very important theologians, friends of Johannes Bugenhagen, later on the friend of Martin Luther and a reformator of northern Germany and the Danish kingdom. His colleagues in Belbuck were Johannes Boldewan, Johannes Äpinus, Christian Ketelhodt, Andreas Knopken. Connected with the monastery was a woman monastery in Treptow, where lived Elisabeth von Meseritz (Elisabeth Cruciger). They all had a great influence on the Reformation and the stabilising of the Lutheran church from Copenhagen up to Riga. The monastery itself was since 1616 completely destroyed, but its history may be helpfull for better understanding of very various processes during the early time of «Reformation» in the southern Baltic Sea region.

Key Words: Johann Bugenhagen, Martin Luther, Johannes Boldewan, Johannes Äpinus, Christian Ketelhodt, Andreas Knopken

URL: http://proslogion.ru/41-ericht/

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