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Dissenting Daughters: Reformed Women in the Dutch Republic, 1572-1725

English

By (author): Amanda C. Pipkin

Dissenting Daughters reveals that devout women made vital contributions to the spread and practice of the Reformed faith in the Dutch Republic in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The six women at the heart of this study: Cornelia Teellinck, Susanna Teellinck, Anna Maria van Schurman, Sara Nevius, Cornelia Leydekker, and Henrica van Hoolwerff, were influential members of networks known for supporting a religious revival known as the Further Reformation. These women earned the support and appreciation of their religious leaders, friends, and relatives by seizing the tools offered by domestic religious study and worship and forming alliances with prominent ministers including Willem Teellinck, Gijsbertus Voetius, Wilhelmus à Brakel, and Melchior Leydekker as well as with other well-connected, well-educated women. They deployed their talents to bolster the Dutch Reformed Church from 1572, the first year its members could publicly organize, to the death of this book's last surviving subject Cornelia Leydekker in 1725. In return for their adoption of religious teachings that constricted them in many ways, they gained the authority to minister to their family members, their female friends, and a broader audience of men and women during domestic worship as well as through their written works. These dissenting daughters vehemently defended their faith - against Spanish and French Catholics, as well as their neighbors, politicians, and ministers within the Dutch Republic whom they judged to be lax and overly tolerant of sinful behavior, finding ways to flourish among the strictest orthodox believers within the Dutch Reformed Church. See more
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Product Details
  • Weight: 1g
  • Dimensions: 165 x 241mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Mar 2022
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780192857279

About Amanda C. Pipkin

Amanda C. Pipkin is Associate Professor of History at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. She received a BA at Wake Forest University an MA at the University of Leiden and a PhD from Rutgers University. Her book Rape in the Republic 1609-1725: Formulating Dutch Identity (2013) reveals the significance of sex and gender in the construction of Dutch identity. She co-edited with Sarah Moran Women and Gender in the Early Modern Low Countries 1500-1750 (2019) an interdisciplinary volume that reveals vital interconnections among women across the modern political divide of The Netherlands and Belgium.

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