The Puritan Experiment: New England Society from Bradford to EdwardsUniversity Press of New England, 1995 - 255 páginas This revised and updated edition of an out-of-print classic once again makes the broad background of Puritanism accessible to students and general readers. Based on a chronology that begins with the Act of Supremacy in 1534 and ends with Jonathan Edwards's death in 1758, Francis J. Bremer's interpretive synthesis of the causes and contexts of the Puritan movement integrates analyses of the religious, political, sociological, economic, and cultural changes wrought by the movement in both Old and New England. From meeting house architecture to Salem witch trials, from relations with Native Americans to the founding of the nation's first colleges, he details with style and grace "a living system of faith" that not only had profound significance for tens of thousands of Englishmen and Americans in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, but also affected the course of history in the New World. |
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Página 83
... organized plan . Some of the towns were founded by men expelled from the Bay . But whereas the Providence Plantations went their own independent way , many of the northeastern settlements were soon absorbed into the jurisdiction of ...
... organized plan . Some of the towns were founded by men expelled from the Bay . But whereas the Providence Plantations went their own independent way , many of the northeastern settlements were soon absorbed into the jurisdiction of ...
Página 107
... organizing a church and were informed that candidates for mem- bership should not only make a confession of their faith ... organized ) . By 1640 the new require- ment was firmly entrenched throughout Massachusetts and New Haven and was ...
... organizing a church and were informed that candidates for mem- bership should not only make a confession of their faith ... organized ) . By 1640 the new require- ment was firmly entrenched throughout Massachusetts and New Haven and was ...
Página 159
... organized in Charlestown a Church of Christ on antipe- dobaptist principles . Goold , a member of the Charlestown congregation , had become convinced of the error of infant baptism almost a decade earlier . In the intervening years he ...
... organized in Charlestown a Church of Christ on antipe- dobaptist principles . Goold , a member of the Charlestown congregation , had become convinced of the error of infant baptism almost a decade earlier . In the intervening years he ...
Conteúdo
The Origins and Growth of the Puritan Movement I | 1 |
Its Essence and Attraction | 15 |
Sources of the Great Migration | 29 |
Direitos autorais | |
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The Puritan Experiment: New England Society from Bradford to Edwards Francis J. Bremer Visualização parcial - 2013 |
The Puritan Experiment: New England Society from Bradford to Edwards Francis J. Bremer Visualização parcial - 1995 |
Termos e frases comuns
American Puritans Andros Anglican Anne Hutchinson Antinomian Assembly authority Baptists became began Bible Commonwealths bishops Boston Calvinist Cambridge Charles charter civil clergy clergymen clerical colonists colony colony's communion Company congregation Congregationalists Connecticut Cotton Mather Council Court decades develop dissenters Dudley early Edward efforts elect Eliot Endecott English Puritan Englishmen established exile faction faith forced freemen God's governor grace Half-Way Covenant Harvard Haven historians Increase Mather Indians individual James John Cotton John Davenport John Endecott John Winthrop king King Philip's War land leaders London Lord magistrates Massachusetts Massachusetts General Court ment Migration ministers orthodoxy Parliament pastor Pequots Pilgrims Plymouth political practice Prayer preaching Presbyterian Protestant Puritan Quakers reform region religion religious Restoration Rhode Island Richard Roger Williams royal sacrament saints Salem Samuel Scriptures Separatists sermon settlement settlers seventeenth century society sought synod theology Thomas Hooker tion town tribes views women York