- of the
earliest promoters of the
Protestant Reformation in Silesia.
Schwenckfeld came to
Reformation principles through Thomas Müntzer and
Andreas Karlstadt...
-
teachings of
Schwenckfeld since the 16th century,
Schwenkfelder Church was not
formed until the 20th century, due in
large part to
Schwenckfeld's emphasis...
-
Smyth &
Helwys (2003). ISBN 1573123994. McLaughlin, R. Emmet,
Caspar Schwenckfeld,
reluctant radical: his life to 1540, New Haven: Yale
University Press...
-
provided sanctuary in
Berthelsdorf to ****cuted
followers of
mystic Caspar Schwenckfeld from
nearby Silesia. They were
forced by the
Electoral Saxon government...
-
religious reformer,
lector of
theology at Liegnitz, and
colleague of
Caspar Schwenckfeld. Born into a
burger family of
Neisse (now Nysa, Poland), he was supported...
- of
Silesia had
turned Protestant,
promoted by
reformers like
Caspar Schwenckfeld.
After the 1620
Battle of
White Mountain, the
Catholic Emperors of the...
-
Brieg (died 1521) and his
widow Anna of Pomerania, the
reformer Caspar Schwenckfeld, born in
nearby Osiek, made the town a
centre of the
Protestant Reformation...
-
leaders of the
Radical Reformation had
mystical leanings such as
Caspar Schwenckfeld and
Sebastian Franck. The
Magisterial traditions also
produced mystics...
- the city
council of
Breslau sided with
Wittenberg and
opposed Caspar Schwenckfeld and his
followers in
Liegnitz (Legnica). In 1541 he took part in the...
- and
scholar Caspar Schütz (c. 1540 – 1594),
German historian Caspar Schwenckfeld (1489 or 1490–1561),
German theologian, writer, preacher, Protestant...