Anti-Jansenisme En Jansenisme in De Nederlanden in De Achttiende En Negentiende Eeuw: Anti-Jansenism and Jansenism in the Netherlands in the 18th-19th centuries.

The tensions between the Augustinian school and the school of Molinism, which increased in the last decade of the 17th century, reached their height after the proclamation of the bull 'Unigenitus' (1713), which condemned Jansenism and indirectly postulated papal infallibility. In the Nethe...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Trajecta
Main Author: Spertz, M. G. (Author)
Format: Electronic/Print Article
Language:English
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Published: Amsterdam University Press 1992
In: Trajecta
Further subjects:B Jansenists
B Netherlands
B Conflict (Psychology)
B Catholic Church
Online Access: Volltext (kostenfrei)
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Summary:The tensions between the Augustinian school and the school of Molinism, which increased in the last decade of the 17th century, reached their height after the proclamation of the bull 'Unigenitus' (1713), which condemned Jansenism and indirectly postulated papal infallibility. In the Netherlands, where Petrus Codde had been deposed by the Holy See in 1704, an autonomous religious community was to go its own way after 1723, separated from Rome and having its own Dutch bishops. After the first Vatican Council (1870) the Old Catholic churches of Germany and Switzerland and the autonomous religious community of Utrecht found each other in a new Union of Utrecht (1889).
ISSN:0778-8304
Contains:Enthalten in: Trajecta