Pages that link to "Item:Q256913"
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The following pages link to Lionel Laborie (2017) Radical tolerance in early enlightenment Europe, History of European Ideas, 43:4, 359-375 (Q256913):
Displayed 38 items.
- The Christian Jane Lead introduces universal salvation within the Church of England (Q256853) (← links)
- 15 members of the Multipliants are arrested at the house of Multipliant Anne Verchand, Montpeiller, March 1723 (Q256854) (← links)
- A Franco-German ecumenical assembly of Lutherans and Calvinist performs the love feast, Halle, January 1714 (Q256855) (← links)
- The Fetter Lane Society is registered under the Toleration Act as a dissenting gathering, London, 1742 (Q256856) (← links)
- Barber-prophet Thomas Moore argues that all men will be saved, Southwark, mid-1690s (Q256857) (← links)
- Barber-prophet Thomas Moore is condembed for seditious libel, 1699 (Q256858) (← links)
- Charles Hector de Saint-Georges, Marquis de Marsay, befriends Johann Maximilian Daut, who teaches him cobbling, 1713 (Q256860) (← links)
- Bourignonist, Quietist and Pietist Charles Hector de Saint-Georges, Marquis de Marsay, established a utopian community in Schwarzenau, 1711 (Q256862) (← links)
- Bourignonist, Quietist and Pietist Charles Hector de Saint-Georges, Marquis de Marsay, stays with the Swiss Pietist François Magny in Vevey, 1715 (Q256863) (← links)
- Catholic and Protestant Multipliants united in ecumenical meals of abundance, Montpeiller, 30 November 1722 (Q256864) (← links)
- French Prophet Benjamin Furly travels to The Hague to plead the cause of French Prophets from England recently imprisoned for disrupting the public peace, 1710 (Q256865) (← links)
- French Prophet Daniel le Tellier celebrates the love feast alongside French Prophet John Potter (Q256866) (← links)
- French Prophet Elie Marion celebrates the love feast alongside French Prophet John Potter (Q256867) (← links)
- French Prophet Moïse Boissac celebrates the love feast alongside French Prophet Potter (Q256868) (← links)
- Fetter Lane Society (Q256871) (← links)
- The Anabaptist Alexander Mack and his Dunkers celebrate the love feast, Schwarzenau, 1708 (Q256872) (← links)
- The Anglican Rev John Mason preaches universalism at his millenarian congregation in Water Stradford after he allegedly received a vision of Christ's imminent Second Coming, 1694 (Q256874) (← links)
- The Anglican Rev John Pordage introduces Behemenist theosophy in England, Bradfield, 1640s (Q256875) (← links)
- The British Israelist prophet Richard Brothers is imprisoned for life after predicting the end of the British monarchy (Q256876) (← links)
- The British Israelist prophet Richard Brothers proclaims himself the King of the Hebrews appointed by God, 1794 (Q256877) (← links)
- The Christian Jane Lead's universalism sparks a schism in the Philadelphian Society, 1697 (Q256879) (← links)
- French Prophet John Potter explains to his disciples the love feast, 1712 (Q256880) (← links)
- The Inspirationists launch 94 missions across Germany and Switzerland, 1715-1742 (Q256881) (← links)
- The Jewish watchmaker Godfrey Koch lived with Bourignonist, Quietist and Pietist Charles Hector de Saint-Georges, Marquis de Marsay, for a year (Q256882) (← links)
- The Methodist John Wesley joins the Fetter Lane Society, where the Moravian missionaries immediately celebrated the love feast, London, 1738 (Q256883) (← links)
- The Methodists depart from the Fetter Lane Society, July 1740 (Q256884) (← links)
- The ministers of the Huguenot colony of Erlangen petition the Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth against the prospective settlement of Jews in their parish, 1702 (Q256885) (← links)
- The Moravian Brother August Gottlieb Spangenberg preached during a Fetter Lane Society love feast, 1743 (Q256886) (← links)
- The Moravian chapel in Fulneck holds a love feast, 24 August 1742 (Q256887) (← links)
- The Moravian/Methodist missionary John Cennick declared himself in favour of universal salvation, 1745 (Q256888) (← links)
- Community of 'True Christians' (Q256889) (← links)
- The Philadelphians declare themselves Catholick in the etymological sense of the term, 1697 (Q256897) (← links)
- The Pietist millenarian prophet Ernst Christoph Hochmann von Hochenau starts building his ecumenical network in Germany and Switzerland, after 1694 (Q256898) (← links)
- The Protestant critic of predestination Michael Servetus is burnt at the stake for his heterodoxy, Geneva, 1553 (Q256899) (← links)
- Gerrad Winstanley, The Mysterie of God (1648) (Q256900) (← links)
- The Protestant Jakob Böhme experieces a vision and devises his own theosophy centred upon internal regeneration and universal salvation, Görlitz, 1600 (Q256901) (← links)
- The Swiss Pietist minister Samuel König and the German millenarian prophet Ernst Christoph Hochmann von Hochenau preach publicly in Berleburg, from 1700 (Q256902) (← links)
- Bourignonist, Quietist and Pietist Charles Hector de Saint-Georges, Marquis de Marsay and his Pietist wife Baroness Clara von Callenberg lead their own religious circle in the house of Johann Friedrich von Fleischbein, Baron of Hayn, Siegen (Q256907) (← links)