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Order of Contents
Early & Medieval 2
Poland, Lithuania & Baltic 6
Ukraine 5
Czechoslovakia (Bohemia), Austria, Hungary, Romania (Transylvania) 4
Russia 3
Quote 1
Biblio
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Early & Medieval Church History
Articles
1900’s
Kruger, Gustav – Harvard Theological Review
‘Literature on Church History in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Holland and the Scandinavian Countries, 1914-1920, I. Early Church History’ in vol. 14, no. 4 (Oct. 1921), pp. 283-374
‘The Medieval Church’ in vol. 15 (Oct. 1922), pp. 323-405
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Poland, Lithuania & the Baltic
Articles
1900’s
The Cambridge Modern History (1907), vol. 2, ‘The Reformation’
ch. 17, ‘The Scandinavian North’
‘Note on the Reformation in Poland’
The New Cambridge Modern History (1990), vol. 2, ‘Reformation’
ch. 6, ‘The Reformation in Scandinavia & the Baltic’
ch. 8, ‘Poland, Bohemia & Hungary’
McNeill, John T. – 7. ‘Religious Discords & Unitive Efforts in Eastern Europe’, pp. 60-65 in ch. 1. “The Ecumenical Idea & Efforts to Realize it, 1517-1618” in eds. Ruth Rouse & Stephen C. Neill, A History of the Ecumenical Movement: 1517-1948 (Philadelphia, 1967)
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2000’s
Luksaite, Inge – ‘The Reformation in Lithuania: A New Look.
Historiography & Interpretation’ in Lituanus, vol. 57, no. 3 (Fall, 2011)
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Books
1800’s
Krasinski, V. – Historical Sketch of… the Reformation in Poland (London: 1839-1840)
Dalton, Hermannn – John A Lasco: his Earlier Life & Labors: a Contribution to the History of the Reformation in Poland, Germany & England (1886) 390 pp.
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1900’s
Edwards, Charles E. – Protestantism in Poland: a Brief Study of its History as an Encouragement to Mission Work among the Poles (1901) 60 pp.
Fox, P. – The Reformation in Poland: Some Social & Economic Aspects (Baltimore, 1924)
The Cambridge History of Poland, vol. 1 (to 1696), 2 (1697-1935) Buy (1941-50) ToC 1, 2
ch. 16, ‘The Reformation in Poland’ in vol. 1
ch. 19, ‘The Counter-Reformation in Poland’ in vol. 1
Frick, David A. – Polish Sacred Philology in the Reformation & the Counter-Reformation: Chapters in the History of the Controversies (1551-1632) (Univ. of California Press, 1989) 300 pp. ToC
Lubieniecki, Stansilas – History of the Polish Reformation & Nine Related Documents trans. George Hunston Williams (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1995)
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Latin Article
1600’s
Voet, Gisbert – Of the Swiss, French, Scottish, Belgic, Polish, Bohemian, Hungarian, Transylvanian & Numerous German Churches in Syllabus of Theological Problems (Utrecht, 1643), pt. 1, section 2, tract 4 Abbr.
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Ukraine
Articles
1900’s
Allen, W.E.D. – chs. 2-4 in Ukraine: a History (Cambridge Univ. Press, 1940)
ed. Frederiksen, O.J. – ch. 11, ‘The First Kozak Uprisings & the Church Union [post-1596]’ in A History of Ukraine (Archon Books, 1970)
Subtelny, Orest – Pt. 2, ‘The Polish-Lithuanian Period’, ch. 6, ‘Religion & Culture’ in Ukraine: a History 3rd ed. (Univ. of Toronto Press, 2000)
Magocsi, Paul R.
ch. 13, ‘Reformation, Counter Reformation & the Union of Brest’ in A History of Ukraine (Univ. of Washington Press, 1996)
“In Ukrainian lands, Protestantism did not have the same kind of impact, in number of converts, as in Poland or even Lithuania, although a recent estimate suggests that there were as many as 400 Protestant congregations (the vast majority Unitarian or Socinian) on Ukrainian territory… at various times between the sixteenth and eighteenth century.” – p. 162
ch. 15, ‘Religion & Culture in Ukrainian Lands in the Sixteenth & Seventeenth Centuries’ in Ukraine: an Illustrated History (Univ. of Washington Press, 2007)
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Czechoslovakia (Bohemia), Austria, Hungary & Romania (Transylvania)
Articles
1900’s
Balogh, F. – ‘History of the Reformed Church in Hungary’ in Reformed Church Review, X (1906), pp. 297-331
Toth, W. – ‘Highlights of the Hungarian Reformation’ in Church History, IX (1940), pp. 141-56
McNeill, John T. – pp. 48-49 & 7. ‘Religious Discords & Unitive Efforts in Eastern Europe’, pp. 60-65 in ch. 1. “The Ecumenical Idea & Efforts to Realize it, 1517-1618” in eds. Ruth Rouse & Stephen C. Neill, A History of the Ecumenical Movement: 1517-1948 (Philadelphia, 1967)
ch. 8, ‘Poland, Bohemia & Hungary’ in The New Cambridge Modern History, vol. 2, ‘Reformation’ (1990)
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Books
1800’s
Banhoffer, G. – History of the Protestant Church in Hungary from the Beginning of the Reformation to 1850, with Special Reference to Transylvania (Boston: 1854) 595 pp. Intro by Merle D’Aubigne
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1900’s
Balogh, Francis – History of the Reformed Church in Hungary (1906) 65 pp.
Revesz, E. et al.- Hungarian Protestantism (Budapest, 1927)
Law, R.S. – Development of the Reformed Church in Hungary during the Sixteenth Century B.D. diss. (Union Theological Seminary, 1948)
Louthan, Howard – Johannis Crato & the Austrian Habsburgs: Reforming a Counter-Reform Court (1994) 48 pp.
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2000’s
Murdock, G. – Calvinism on the Frontier, 1600–1660. International Calvinism & the Reformed Church in Hungary & Transsylvania (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2000)
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Latin
1600’s
Voet, Gisbert – Of the Swiss, French, Scottish, Belgic, Polish, Bohemian, Hungarian, Transylvanian & Numerous German Churches in Syllabus of Theological Problems (Utrecht, 1643), pt. 1, section 2, tract 4 Abbr.
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1700’s
Lampe, A. – Historia ecclesiae reformatae in Hungaria et Transylvania (Utrecht, 1728)
Rubini, J. – Memorabilia Augustanae Confessionis in regno Hungariae (Poszony, 1787)
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Russia
Books
1900’s
Medlin, William K. & Christos G. Patrinelis – Renaissance Influences & Religious Reforms in Russia: Western & Post-Byzantine Impacts on Culture & Education (16th – 17th Centuries) in Etudes de Philologie et D’Histoire Pre (Geneva, 1971) no ToC
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2000’s
Ivanov, Andrey V. – A Spiritual Revolution: The Impact of Reformation & Enlightenment in Orthodox Russia, 1700–1825 Pre (University of Wisconsin Press, 2020) ToC
Blurb: “The ideas of the Protestant Reformation, followed by the European Enlightenment, had a profound and long-lasting impact on Russia’s church and society in the eighteenth century. Though the traditional Orthodox Church was often assumed to have been hostile toward outside influence, Andrey V. Ivanov’s study argues that the institution in fact embraced many Western ideas, thereby undergoing what some observers called a religious revolution.
Embedded with lively portrayals of historical actors and vivid descriptions of political details, A Spiritual Revolution is the first large-scale effort to fully identify exactly how Western progressive thought influenced the Russian Church. These new ideas played a foundational role in the emergence of the country as a modernizing empire and the rise of the Church hierarchy as a forward-looking agency of institutional and societal change. Ivanov addresses this important debate in the scholarship on European history, firmly placing Orthodoxy within the much wider European and global continuum of religious change.”
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Latin Article
1600’s
Voet, Gisbert – 8. The Modern Churches Beyond: the Western, Greek, of Moscow, Armenia, Egypt, Iberia, Syria, Jacobite, of Georgia, Ethiopia & the Indies in Syllabus of Theological Problems (Utrecht, 1643), pt. 1, section 2, tract 4 Abbr.
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Quote
John T. McNeill
in eds. Ruth Rouse & Stephen C. Neill, A History of the Ecumenical Movement: 1517-1948 (Philadelphia, 1967), ch. 1. “The Ecumenical Idea & Efforts to Realize it, 1517-1618”, p. 28 McNeill was an editor of Calvin’s Institutes.
“Calvinism won territory from Lutheranism as well as from Roman Catholicism in Germany, and entered Bohemia, Hungary, and Poland with considerable force, replacing an earlier Lutheran influence. But it was checked in these areas and, except in Hungary, almost extinguished by the forces of the Counter-Reformation and the results of the Thirty Years War.”
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Bibliography
Bainton, Roland H. & Eric W. Gritsch – Bibliography of the Continental Reformation (Archon Books, 1972) 240 pp. ToC
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Related Pages
History of the Reformation in Scandinavia
History of the Dutch Reformation in Belgium & the Netherlands