Johns Hopkins University Press
Venice's Hidden Enemies: Italian Heretics in a Renaissance City
Venice's Hidden Enemies: Italian Heretics in a Renaissance City
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Winner of the Herbert Baxter Adams Prize of the American Historical Association
Renaissance Venice is generally portrayed as a city of harmony and consensus. This book offers a sharply different view by highlighting the history of religious dissent in this early modern city. Drawing on sixteenth-century records from archives of the Roman Inquisition, John Jeffries Martin reconstructs the social and cultural worlds of the Venetian heretics--those men and women who articulated their hopes for religious and political reform. Among them were Evangelists, Protestants, Anabaptists, Antitrinitarians, and Millenarians, whose ideologies ranged from moderate to radical. The protagonists included men and women from all social classes; but artisans, above all those in the elite crafts, proved especially likely to give their support to the new reform ideas. Martin's analysis, which explores the interconnections of religious beliefs and social experience, offers new perspectives on the Italian Reformation and demonstrates widespread persistent popular support for this reform of church and society well after the establishment of the Roman Inquisition in the 1540s.
Author: John Jeffries Martin
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Published: 01/19/2004
Pages: 304
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.99lbs
Size: 9.14h x 5.98w x 0.73d
ISBN: 9780801878770
About the Author
John Jeffries Martin is a professor of history at Trinity University, the editor of The Renaissance: Italy and Abroad and co-editor of Venice Reconsidered: The History and Civilization of an Italian City-State, 1297-1797, also available from Johns Hopkins.
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