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- W4287447712 abstract "Between the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century, millenarian expectations flourished in Protestant territories, when the widespread feeling of being at the end of the times changed into a more optimistic view on the future. The so-called German Pietism represents one of the main examples in this sense. The authors who hold millenarian views were not few: the Berlebug Bible (1726–1742), is, maybe, the most well-known fruit of this movement. This chapter focuses on the flourishing of millenarianism in the period considered the very beginning of Pietism: The Frankfurt conventicles gathered around the theologian Philipp Jakob Spener in the 1670s. Four figures are particularly significant in this sense: the lawyer Johann Jakob Schütz (considered co-founder of the German Pietism), Johanna Eleonora von und zu Merlau, Johann Wilhelm Petersen (who will later marry Johanna Eleonora), and Spener himself. Starting from the relationship among these authors as appears in their correspondence and in some autobiographies, this study will analyze: (1). The beginning of the millenarian expectation in the Frankfurt circle; (2). The sources who played a decisive role in shaping such an eschatological position, showing that, among the several chiliastic treatises known to the Frankfurter, the Kabbalistic treatise of Sulzbach played a decisive role." @default.
- W4287447712 created "2022-07-25" @default.
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- W4287447712 date "2022-07-25" @default.
- W4287447712 modified "2023-10-16" @default.
- W4287447712 title "Kabbalistic Influences on “Pietistic” Millenarian Expectations" @default.
- W4287447712 doi "https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003081050-10" @default.
- W4287447712 hasPublicationYear "2022" @default.
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