Topic: 6. Sacrifices of self: Martyrology after Reformation (16th-18th Century)

During the volatile period between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries, the concept of martyrdom underwent significant reinterpretations across different Christian denominations. This section explores how Catholics, Protestants, and Anabaptists each uniquely perceived and portrayed martyrdom. Protestants, countering the Catholic notion of sainthood, crafted new martyrologies to establish a lineage of sacrifice rooted in what they deemed as true faith. Similarly, the Anabaptists viewed the state of persecution, as chronicled in their martyrologies, as a testament to being part of the true church. This collection includes a wide array of early modern Catholic, Lutheran, Calvinist, and Anabaptist printed sources and images. It is further enriched by a comprehensive bibliography spanning from the 19th to the 21st Century, offering modern perspectives on these historical interpretations

Displaying results from 81 to 100 of 615


Anonymous / Unknown

Schismaticorum in Anglia Crudelitas. (1587)

from: Verstegan, R. Theatrum Crudelitatum haereticorum nostri temporis. 1587, p. 25

Kaiserliche Koenigliche, Hofbibliothek, Vienna

Anonymous / Unknown

Schismaticorum in Anglia Crudelitas. (1587)

from: Verstegan, R. Theatrum Crudelitatum haereticorum nostri temporis. 1587, p. 27

Kaiserliche Koenigliche, Hofbibliothek, Vienna

Anonymous / Unknown

Schismaticorum in Anglia Crudelitas. (1587)

from: Verstegan, R. Theatrum Crudelitatum haereticorum nostri temporis. 1587, p. 29

Kaiserliche Koenigliche, Hofbibliothek, Vienna

Anonymous / Unknown

The Burning of Thomas Wats, Martyr. (1570)

from: Foxe, J. Book of Martyrs, 1684

Atla Digital Library

Anonymous / Unknown

The Burning of two Women (1570)

from: Foxe, J. Book of Martyrs, 1684

Atla Digital Library


Displaying results from 81 to 100 of 615