Conversos and collegiants". Religion. 28 (1): 3–14. doi:10.1006/reli.1997.0115. Lee, Rosa Ethel (1917). The influence of Mennonites, Collegiants and Quakers...
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Hebrew scholar, a leader of the Collegiants and a friend of Baruch Spinoza; Peter Balling was a member of the Collegiants; Benjamin Furly, associated with...
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A collegian may be: a member of a college One of the Collegians or Collegiants, a religious sect founded in Holland in 1619 an inmate in a prison (slang)...
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favor of the lay sermon, the adherents of which founded the Society of Collegiants. An exile community of Remonstrants was founded in Antwerp in 1619. In...
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churches and traditional dogmas. Spinoza was acquainted with members of the Collegiants, a group of disaffected Mennonites and other dissenting Reformed sects...
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merchant and weaver who was a member of the Collegiants. The philosopher Spinoza had joined the Collegiants and his ideas became the source of a division...
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founders of the Amsterdam College; the Collegiants were also often called Boreelists. Others involved in the Collegiants were William Ames, Daniel van Breen...
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Millenarians and was taken seriously by the Cambridge Platonists and Dutch Collegiants. Henry More was critical of Böhme and claimed he was not a real prophet...
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Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696–1787) Gerhard Tersteegen (1697–1769) Collegiants (17th c) Pierre Guerin (17th c) Joseph Salmon (17th c) Sarah Pierpont...
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confined for a short time as a lunatic. Ames zealously preached to the Collegiants, and although initially in accord, they later fell out. He traveled in...
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