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  • Anabaptist movement by means of expulsion were only partly successful. In the 17th century it flared up anew. Beginning in 1676 a long line of orders and mandates
    11 KB (1,872 words) - 13:57, 21 April 2020
  • "Stenz, Hans (17th century)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1959. Web. 27 May 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Stenz,_Hans_(17t
    2 KB (367 words) - 07:35, 16 January 2017
  • Mennonites in the Swiss canton of Aargau as early as the late 16th and early 17th centuries, chiefly in the villages of Hinderwyl, Muhen, and Uerkheim. A
    4 KB (705 words) - 16:58, 12 April 2014
  • Veit Grünberger, Hans Mändl, etc. Worth mentioning is also one tract by the Philipite brethren, Concerning a True Soldier of Christ by Hans Haffner, 1535
    12 KB (1,588 words) - 21:07, 13 April 2014
  • Georg Thormann gives a valuable report on the Swiss Anabaptists of the 17th century, particularly in Bern, in his Probier-Stein oder Schriftmässige und aus
    12 KB (1,610 words) - 18:39, 28 July 2018
  • Hotz, Hans (16th century) (category Sixteenth Century Anabaptist Martyrs)
    "Hotz, Hans (16th century)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1956. Web. 26 May 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Hotz,_Hans_(16th
    7 KB (1,148 words) - 07:29, 16 January 2017
  • title=Balthasar_Grasbanntner_(16th_century)&oldid=75114. APA style Klassen, William. (1959). Balthasar Grasbanntner (16th century). Global Anabaptist Mennonite
    4 KB (607 words) - 18:44, 20 August 2013
  • Mennonites continued to be banished on religious grounds until within the 18th century, particularly in the cantons of Bern and Zürich. The history of Anabaptist
    15 KB (2,370 words) - 07:27, 16 January 2017
  • conditions of the Mennonite church during the latter part of the 16th and early 17th centuries in Hans Alenson's Tegen-Bericht op de voor-Reden van 't groote Martelaer
    43 KB (5,839 words) - 21:11, 13 April 2014
  • from Mollem near Ghent, Belgium, or Molhem near Brussels, during 17th-18th centuries members of the Flemish congregation at Amsterdam, where some of them
    2 KB (383 words) - 09:13, 20 January 2014
  • Mennonites in the 17th century." After the period of "peace" confession making was past, no new confessions were produced in Holland for a century. Thereafter
    61 KB (7,913 words) - 14:27, 17 March 2023
  • the 19th century there were several members of the Plantinus family at Drachten, Johannes Müller at Amsterdam, and in the 19th and 20th centuries the publishing
    28 KB (3,431 words) - 15:28, 1 February 2019
  • in the Emmental. Persecution in the canton of Bern, lasting into the 18th century, compelled many Mennonites to emigrate. The "Amnesty Proclamation" issued
    6 KB (816 words) - 07:34, 16 January 2017
  • published by Lydia Müller in her Glaubenszeugnisse oberdeutscher Taufgesinnter (Leipzig, 1938). The authors are Hans Hut, Lienhart Schiemer, Hans Schlaffer, and
    82 KB (12,758 words) - 15:26, 7 December 2019
  • Holland have never had their own cemeteries. During the 16th, 17th, and part of the 18th centuries no mourning service was held. The preachers were usually
    19 KB (2,871 words) - 00:03, 16 January 2017
  • Brethren in Russia this last concept had prevailed in part to the mid-20th century. In the negotiations for unification between the Amish and Mennonites
    81 KB (12,636 words) - 14:22, 17 March 2023

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