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  1. Hace 1 día · Leclerc also acknowledged the stir caused by Balthasar Bekker's De Betoverde Wereld, and the importance of making it known immediately to those who did not read Dutch, by providing a lengthy extract in French for readers of his Bibliothèque universelle et historique in 1691, the year of the work s publication.

  2. Hace 5 días · Nor was he, we might add, a Balthasar Bekker. There was no rejection of the spirit world. Hunter surveys some of the well-trodden arguments advanced by the ‘orthodox’: particularly fraud and ‘physiological or psychological defects’, yet he pays scant attention to the new historicizing wrapper in which they were often ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Witch-huntWitch-hunt - Wikipedia

    Hace 3 días · Prominent contemporaneous critics of witch-hunts included Gianfrancesco Ponzinibio (fl. 1520), Johannes Wier (1515–1588), Reginald Scot (1538–1599), Cornelius Loos (1546–1595), Anton Praetorius (1560–1613), Alonso Salazar y Frías (1564–1636), Friedrich Spee (1591–1635), and Balthasar Bekker (1634–1698).

  4. 20 de may. de 2024 · De predikant van Amsterdam, Balthasar Bekker, schrijft het boek “De betoverde wereld”, waarin hij zich afzet tegen het wijdverbreide geloof in heksen en duivels. Hij werd daarop uit het ambt gezet. In de Republiek ontstaat een heftig dispuut tussen mede- en tegenstanders over het boek.

  5. 30 de abr. de 2024 · Beaumont was a firm believer in the occult and one of his main aims in writing his book was to refute Balthasar Bekkers 1695 work The World Bewitch’d, which debunked the supernatural. Beaumont collected together many accounts of paranormal experiences from respectable narrators such as clergyman and aristocrats as evidence to ...

  6. 1 de may. de 2024 · Reproducciones De Arte Retrato de Balthasar Bekker, Clergyman y Hombre de Letras en Amsterdam, Arnoud van Halen, 1700 - 1732, 1732 de Arnoud Van Halen (1673-1732, Netherlands) | ArtsDot.com

  7. 13 de may. de 2024 · Franz Schreker was the oldest of four surviving children born to Ignaz Schrecker, a court photographer and Jewish by birth, and Eleonore von Clossmann, a member of the Catholic aristocracy of eastern Styria. Ignaz Schrecker's restless travels took him and his family from Vienna to Monaco, Spa, Brussels, Paris, Trieste, and Pola before he ...