Results 61 to 70 of about 2,098 (209)
Law and Order in Exile Communities in Early Modern Norfolk
Abstract In November 1565, Queen Elizabeth issued Letters Patent permitting thirty textile masters from the Low Countries to settle in Norwich and practice their trade. By early 1566, two language communities, one Dutch and the other French, had been established, each with its own church.
CHRISTOPHER JOBY
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Roger L’Estrange, les Français et la presse : traductions et propagande anglicane, 1678-1681
This article explores some French translations of works by the immensely prolific English journalist, pamphleteer and censor, Roger L’Estrange (1616-1704) together with a translation he made himself. First, the article analyses the French versions of his
Anne Dunan-Page
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Introduction: Exile and Innovation☆
Abstract The early modern period was an age marked by the forced migration and displacement of social groups and individuals around the world. Huguenots, conversos, Catholics, cavaliers, Jacobites, and French emigrés alike fled or were expelled from their homes and communities.
Annalisa Nicholson, Christophe Gillain
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« Ceux de la Relligion pretendue se trouverent sy cours de memoire… »
This study, by examining the mechanisms of qualification of the French Protestants’ relationship with the past by the royal power in the 1620s, would like to explore a hypothesis: one of the means of expression by the royal power of its domination over ...
Adrien Aracil
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Abstract During the seventeenth century, thousands of English‐speaking Protestants went to the Maghreb as captives, diplomats, traders, and travellers. Distant from the guiding and controlling hands of monopoly trading companies and the established churches, and placed under various pressures by non‐Christian neighbours, colleagues, and captors, these ...
Nat Cutter
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Abstract This article establishes the intellectual origins and underpinnings of the early modern soldier‐scholar in order to better understand the military humanist tradition within which Sir Walter Ralegh's writings on naval warfare and logistics were conceived and composed. By locating Ralegh within this tradition, the article provides a new critical
MATTHEW WOODCOCK
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Une « politique de l’oubliance » ? Mémoire et oubli pendant les guerres de Religion (1550-1600)
The french Wars of religion (1562-1598) involve memory in a very strange way. Indeed, each pacification edict is an opportunity for the french Crown to impose forgetfulness of recent wars between Catholics and Protestants. These “politics of forgiveness”
Paul-Alexis Mellet, Jérémie Foa
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Huguenots, Jacobites, Prisoners and the Challenge of Military Remittances in Early Modern Warfare. [PDF]
Graham A.
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Cultes et cultures : apports huguenots à l’histoire culturelle du jardin et du monde végétal
In various host countries, the Huguenot Refuges contributed to the diffusion of utilitarian plants but also to the culture of flowers and to the development of botany. Even if a clear distinction cannot always be made, the contribution of the second wave
Otto Schaefer
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