- The
Batenburgers were
members of a
radical Anabaptist sect led by Jan van Batenburg, that
flourished briefly in the 1530s in the Netherlands, in the aftermath...
-
religious body,
through changes in the
names used and
beliefs held. The
Batenburgers under Jan van
Batenburg preserved the
violent millennialist stream of...
-
Landgrave of Hesse.
After the Münster rebellion, the
small group of the
Batenburgers continued to
adhere to
militant Anabaptist beliefs. Non-violent Anabaptist...
-
Zwickau prophets Congregationalism Groups Swiss Brethren Hutterites Batenburgers Mennonites Old
Order Mennonites Conservative Mennonites Russian Mennonites...
-
Baptist Brethren Other Anabaptists Abecedarians Apostolic Christian Church Batenburgers Bruderhof Charity Christian Fellowship Church of the
United Brethren...
-
links with some of the more
militant Anabaptist movements, such as the
Batenburgers, that
flourished in the
Dutch Republic during the 16th century. The young...
- Mennonites.
Radical Anabaptist groups included the Münsterites and the
Batenburgers, who
persisted in
various guises as late as the 1570s.
Within the inspirationist...
- (Community of True Inspiration)
Followers of
Thomas Müntzer
Aurora Colony Batenburgers Diggers Dulcinians Jesus Army
Labadists Levellers Harmony Society Oneida...
-
could mean
resumed ****cution.
Other groups of Anabaptists, such as the
Batenburgers, were
eventually destro**** by
their unwillingness to fight. This pla****...
- even violent,
developments under Anabaptist-****ociated groups, like the
Batenburgers. A
similar violent take-over of the city of Münster was subsequently...