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  1. Gottfried Arnold (5 September 1666 – 30 May 1714) was a German Lutheran theologian and historian . Biography. Arnold was born at Annaberg in Saxony, Germany, where his father was schoolmaster. In 1682, he went to the Gymnasium at Gera and three years later to the University of Wittenberg.

  2. 28 de may. de 2024 · Overview. Gottfried Arnold. (1666—1714) Quick Reference. (1666–1714), German Protestant theologian and devotional writer. His main work, the Unparteiische Kirchen- und Ketzer-Historie (1699–1700), is important as a history of Protestant mysticism and for its use of out-of-the-way documents.

  3. 1 de ene. de 2005 · Gottfried Arnold (1666–1714) Peter C. Erb. Book Editor (s): Carter Lindberg. First published: 01 January 2005. https://doi.org/10.1002/9780470776032.ch11. Citations: 1. PDF. Tools. Share. Summary. This chapter contains section titled: Arnold's Early Career. The Radical Turn. Defending Mystical Theology in the Established Church.

    • Peter C. Erb
    • 2008
  4. 16 de may. de 2022 · The author investigates this assertion, centering attention on the life and work of Gottfried Arnold (1666-1714), the Lutheran historian, theologian, and poet, who of all the early pietists had the most wide-ranging knowledge and made the most extensive use of late medieval mystics.

  5. ARNOLD, GOTTFRIED. Evangelical mystic and Church historian; b. Annaberg, Saxony, Sept. 5, 1666; d. Perleberg, May 30, 1714. After absorbing pietism from Philipp spener in Dresden, he drifted toward radical spiritualism.

  6. ARNOLD, GOTTFRIED: Lutheran; b. at Annaberg (18 m. s. of Chemnitz), Saxony, Sept. 5, 1688; d. at Perleberg (75 m. n.w. of Berlin), Prussia, May 30, 1714. In 1685 he began the study of theology at Wittenberg but gave himself up to independent reading in early church history.

  7. Gottfried Arnold on his ‘witnesses of truth’ HERETICS ADVOCATE PLACES THE BOGOMILS IN THE LIGHT AGAIN After the Bogomils had been almost literally driven into the sea as heretics by worldly as well as religious persecutors and by the Ottoman occupant of Eastern Europe, in Dalmatia, at the end of the fifteenth century, they seemed to be definitely erased from historiography - until the ...