1.
Walsham, A.: Charitable hatred: tolerance and intolerance in England, 1500-1700. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2006).
2.
Kaplan, B.J.: Divided by Faith: Religious Conflict and the Practice of Toleration in Early Modern Europe. Harvard University Press (2007).
3.
Naphy, W.G., Roberts, P.: Fear in early modern society. Manchester University Press, Manchester, England.
4.
Moore, R.I.: The formation of a persecuting society: authority and deviance in Western Europe, 950-1250. Blackwell Publishing, Malden, MA (2007).
5.
Richards, J., Mazal Holocaust Collection: Sex, dissidence, and damnation: minority groups in the Middle Ages. Routledge, London (1990).
6.
Terpstra, N.: Religious refugees in the early modern world: an alternative history of the Reformation. Cambridge University Press, New York, NY (2015).
7.
Coward, B., Swann, J.: Conspiracies and conspiracy theory in Early Modern Europe: from the Waldensians to the French Revolution. Ashgate, Aldershot, Hampshire, England.
8.
Nirenberg, D.: Communities of violence: persecution of minorities in the Middle Ages. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J.
9.
Grell, O.P., Scribner, B.: Tolerance and Intolerance in the European Reformation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996).
10.
Waugh, S.L., Diehl, P.D.: Christendom and its discontents: exclusion, persecution, and rebellion, 1000-1500. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [England] (1996).
11.
Walsham, A.: Charitable hatred: tolerance and intolerance in England, 1500-1700. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2006).
12.
Kaplan, B.J.: Divided by Faith: Religious Conflict and the Practice of Toleration in Early Modern Europe. Harvard University Press (2007).
13.
Naphy, W.G., Roberts, P.: Fear in early modern society. Manchester University Press, Manchester, England.
14.
Moore, R.I.: The formation of a persecuting society: authority and deviance in Western Europe, 950-1250. Blackwell Publishing, Malden, MA (2007).
15.
Nirenberg, D.: Communities of violence: persecution of minorities in the Middle Ages. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J.
16.
Waugh, S.L., Diehl, P.D.: Christendom and its discontents: exclusion, persecution, and rebellion, 1000-1500. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [England] (1996).
17.
Coward, B., Swann, J.: Conspiracies and conspiracy theory in Early Modern Europe: from the Waldensians to the French Revolution. Ashgate, Aldershot, Hampshire, England.
18.
Richards, J., Mazal Holocaust Collection: Sex, dissidence, and damnation: minority groups in the Middle Ages. Routledge, London (1990).
19.
Bejczy, I.: Tolerantia: A Medieval Concept. Journal of the History of Ideas. 58, (1997). https://doi.org/10.2307/3653905.
20.
Terpstra, N.: Religious refugees in the early modern world: an alternative history of the Reformation. Cambridge University Press, New York, NY (2015).
21.
Hexter, J.H., Malament, B.C., Bouwsma, W.J.: After the Reformation: essays in honor of J.H. Hexter. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia (1980).
22.
Grell, O.P., Scribner, B.: Tolerance and Intolerance in the European Reformation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996).
23.
Duggan, L.G.: Fear and Confession on the Eve of the Reformation. Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte. 75, (1984). https://doi.org/10.14315/arg-1984-jg08.
24.
Kinsman, R.S.: The Darker vision of the Renaissance: beyond the fields of reason. University of California Press, Berkeley (1974).
25.
Cohn, N.R.C.: Europe’s inner demons: the demonization of Christians in medieval Christendom. Pimlico, London (1993).
26.
Camporesi, P.: The fear of hell: images of damnation and salvation in early modern Europe. Polity, Cambridge (1991).
27.
Ecclesiastical History Society. Summer Meeting, Ecclesiastical History Society. Winter Meeting: Persecution and toleration: papers read at the Twenty-second Summer Meeting and the Twenty-third Winter Meeting of the Ecclesiastical History Society. Published for the Ecclesiastical History Society by B. Blackwell, [Oxford] (1984).
28.
Douglas, M.: Purity and Danger: an Analysis of Concepts of Pollution and Taboo. Taylor & Francis (2013).
29.
Zagorin, P.: How the idea of religious toleration came to the West. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J.
30.
Brown, P.: The world of late antiquity: from Marcus Aurelius to Muhammad. Thames and Hudson, London (1971).
31.
Cook, M.: Muhammad. Oxford University Press, Oxford (1983).
32.
Trevor-Roper, H.R.: The rise of Christian Europe. Thames & Hudson (1966).
33.
Avni, G.: The Byzantine-Islamic Transition in Palestine. Oxford University Press (2014). https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199684335.001.0001.
34.
Crone, P., Hinds, M.: God’s caliph: religious authority in the first centuries of Islam. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [Cambridgeshire] (1986).
35.
Crone, P.: Meccan trade and the rise of Islam. Gorgias Press, Piscataway, N.J. (2004).
36.
Retso, J.: The Arabs in antiquity: their history from the Assyrians to the Umayyads. Routledge, New York (2002).
37.
Donner, F.M.: Muhammad and the believers: at the origins of Islam. The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2010).
38.
Donner, F.M., American Council of Learned Societies, History E-Book Project, ACLS Humanities E-Book (Organization): The early Islamic conquests. American Council of Learned Societies, New York, NY (2008).
39.
Holt, P.M., Lambton, A.K.S., Lewis, B.: The Cambridge history of Islam: Vol. 1: The central Islamic lands. Cambridge University Press, London (1970).
40.
Collins, R.: The Arab conquest of Spain, 710-797. B. Blackwell, Oxford, UK (1989).
41.
Fletcher, R.A., Barton, S., Linehan, P.: Cross, crescent and conversion: studies on medieval Spain and christendom in memory of Richard Fletcher. Brill, Leiden (2008).
42.
Kennedy, H., Mazal Holocaust Collection: The great Arab conquests: how the spread of Islam changed the world we live in. Da Capo, Philadelphia, PA.
43.
Crone, P.: God’s rule: government and Islam. Columbia University Press, New York.
44.
Halm, H.: Shi’ism. Columbia University Press, New York (2014).
45.
Harvey, L.P., Mazal Holocaust Collection: Islamic Spain, 1250 to 1500. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1990).
46.
Kennedy, H.: The court of the caliphs: the rise and fall of Islam’s greatest dynasty. Phoenix, London (2005).
47.
LASSNER, JACOB.: SHAPING OF ’ABBASID RULE. PRINCETON UNIV PRESS, [S.l.] (2017).
48.
Nirenberg, D.: Anti-Judaism: the history of a way of thinking. Head of Zeus, London (2013).
49.
Chazan, R.: The Jews of Medieval Western Christendom, 1000-1500. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK (2006).
50.
Hsia, R.P.: The myth of ritual murder: Jews and magic in Reformation Germany. Yale University Press, New Haven.
51.
Merback, M.B.: Beyond the yellow badge: anti-Judaism and antisemitism in medieval and early modern visual culture. Brill, Leiden (2008).
52.
Rubin, M.: Gentile tales: the narrative assault on late medieval Jews. Yale University Press, New Haven.
53.
Strickland, D.H.: Saracens, demons & Jews: making monsters in Medieval art. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J.
54.
Stow, K.R., Mazal Holocaust Collection: Alienated minority: the Jews of medieval Latin Europe. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1992).
55.
Rashkow, I.N.: Hebrew Bible Translation and the Fear of Judaization. Sixteenth Century Journal. 21, (1990). https://doi.org/10.2307/2541051.
56.
Cassen, F.: Marking the Jews in Renaissance Italy: politics, religion, and the power of symbols. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2017).
57.
Cohen, J., Mazal Holocaust Collection: The friars and the Jews: the evolution of medieval anti-Judaism. Cornell University Press, Ithaca (1982).
58.
Glick, L.B.: Abraham’s heirs: Jews and Christians in medieval Europe. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse, NY (1999).
59.
Israel, J.I.: European Jewry in the Age of Mercantilism, 1550-1750. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1989).
60.
Elukin, J.M.: Living together, living apart: rethinking Jewish-Christian relations in the Middle Ages. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J.
61.
Bodian, M.: Hebrews of the Portuguese nation: conversos and community in early modern Amsterdam. Indiana University Press, Bloomington.
62.
Kaplan, D.: Beyond expulsion: Jews, Christians, and Reformation Strasbourg. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif.
63.
Rublack, U. ed: Protestantism and Non-Christian Religions. In: The Oxford Handbook of the Protestant Reformations (2016).
64.
Deutsch, Y.: Judaism in Christian Eyes: Ethnographic Descriptions of Jews and Judaism in Early Modern Europe. Oxford Scholarship Online (2012).
65.
Teter, M.: Sinners on trial: Jews and sacrilege after the reformation. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2011).
66.
Miriam Bodian: In the Cross-Currents of the Reformation: Crypto-Jewish Martyrs of the Inquisition 1570-1670. Past & Present. 66–104 (2002).
67.
Brady, T.A., Oberman, H.A., Tracy, J.D.: Handbook of European history, 1400-1600: late Middle Ages, Renaissance, and Reformation. W.B. Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, Mich (1996).
68.
Hsia, R.P., Lehmann, H.: In and out of the ghetto: Jewish-gentile relations in late medieval and early modern Germany. German Historical Institute, Washington, D.C. (1995).
69.
Edwards, J.: The Jews in Western Europe, 1400-1600. Manchester University Press, Manchester (1995).
70.
Edwards, J.: The Jews in Christian Europe, 1400-1700. Routledge, London (1988).
71.
Elyada, A.: Protestant Scholars and Yiddish Studies in Early Modern Europe. Past & Present. 203, 69–98 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtp015.
72.
Elyada, A.: A goy who speaks Yiddish: Christians and the Jewish language in early modern Germany. Stanford University Press, Stanford, California (2013).
73.
Goodman, M., Cohen, J., Sorkin, D.J.: The Oxford handbook of Jewish studies. Oxford University Press, Oxford [england] (2002).
74.
Bell, D.P., Burnett, S.G.: Jews, Judaism, and the Reformation in sixteenth-century Germany. Brill, Leiden (2006).
75.
Walsham, A.: Charitable hatred: tolerance and intolerance in England, 1500-1700. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2006).
76.
Kaplan, B.J.: Divided by Faith: Religious Conflict and the Practice of Toleration in Early Modern Europe. Harvard University Press (2007).
77.
Grell, O.P., Scribner, B.: Tolerance and Intolerance in the European Reformation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996).
78.
Hsia, R.P.: A companion to the Reformation world. Blackwell Pub, Malden, MA (2004).
79.
Hsia, R.P.: A companion to the Reformation world. Blackwell Pub, Malden, MA (2004).
80.
Racaut, L., Ryrie, A.: Moderate voices in the European Reformation. Ashgate, Aldershot, Hants, England.
81.
Louthan, H.: The quest for compromise: peacemakers in counter-Reformation Vienna. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1997).
82.
Dalia M. Leonardo: ‘Cut off This Rotten Member’: The Rhetoric of Heresy, Sin, and Disease in the Ideology of the French Catholic League. The Catholic Historical Review. 88, 247–262 (2002).
83.
Monter, W.: Heresy executions in Reformation Europe, 1520–1565. In: Tolerance and Intolerance in the European Reformation. pp. 48–64. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996). https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511523328.006.
84.
Zagorin, P.: Ways of lying: dissimulation, persecution, and conformity in early modern Europe. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1990).
85.
PEREZ ZAGORIN: The Historical Significance of Lying and Dissimulation. Social Research. 63, 863–912 (1996).
86.
Grell, O.P.: Brethren in Christ: a Calvinist network in Reformation Europe. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK (2011).
87.
Grell, O.P., Scribner, B.: Tolerance and Intolerance in the European Reformation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996).
88.
Terpstra, N.: Religious refugees in the early modern world: an alternative history of the Reformation. Cambridge University Press, New York, NY (2015).
89.
Gunther, K.: Reformation unbound: Protestant visions of reform in England, 1525-1590. Cambridge University Press, New York (2014).
90.
Corens, L.: Confessional mobility and English Catholics in counter-reformation Europe. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2019).
91.
Gregory, B.S.: Salvation at stake: Christian martyrdom in early modern Europe. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1999).
92.
Zagorin, P.: Ways of lying: dissimulation, persecution, and conformity in early modern Europe. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1990).
93.
Duffy, E.: Fires of faith: Catholic England under Mary Tudor. Yale University Press, New Haven (2010).
94.
WRIGHT, J.: Marian Exiles and the Legitimacy of Flight from Persecution. The Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 52, 220–243 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022046901005929.
95.
Loades, D.M.: Mary Tudor: a life. Basil Blackwell, Oxford, UK.
96.
Dillon, A.: The Construction of Martyrdom in the English Catholic Community, 1535-1603. Taylor and Francis, Brookfield (2003).
97.
Diefendorf, B.B.: The St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre: a brief history with documents. Bedford/St. Martins, Boston, Mass.
98.
Natalie Zemon Davis: The Rites of Violence: Religious Riot in Sixteenth-Century France. Past & Present. 51–91 (1973).
99.
Natalie Zemon Davis: The Rites of Violence: Religious Riot in Sixteenth-Century France: A Rejoinder. Past & Present. 131–135 (1975).
100.
David Nicholls: The Theatre of Martyrdom in the French Reformation. Past & Present. 49–73 (1988).
101.
Scribner, R.W., Porter, R., Teich, M.: The Reformation in national context. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1994).
102.
Pettegree, A.: The early Reformation in Europe. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1992).
103.
Holt, M.P.: Renaissance and Reformation France, 1500-1648. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2002).
104.
Hsia, R.P.: A companion to the Reformation world. Blackwell Pub, Malden, MA (2004).
105.
Holt, M.P.: The French wars of religion, 1562-1629. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK (2005).
106.
Kingdon, R.M.: Geneva and the coming of the wars of religion in France, 1555-1563. Librairie E. Droz, Genève (1956).
107.
David Nicholls: The Social History of the French Reformation: Ideology, Confession and Culture. Social History. 9, 25–43 (1984).
108.
Prestwich, M.: International Calvinism, 1541-1715. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1985).
109.
Diefendorf, B.: Prologue to a Massacre: Popular Unrest in Paris, 1557-1572. The American Historical Review. 90, (1985). https://doi.org/10.2307/1859659.
110.
Sypher, G.W.: ‘Faisant ce qu’il leur vient a plaisir’: The Image of Protestantism in French Catholic Polemic on the Eve of the Religious Wars. Sixteenth Century Journal. 11, (1980). https://doi.org/10.2307/2540033.
111.
Dalia M. Leonardo: ‘Cut off This Rotten Member’: The Rhetoric of Heresy, Sin, and Disease in the Ideology of the French Catholic League. The Catholic Historical Review. 88, 247–262 (2002).
112.
Diefendorf, B.B.: Simon Vigor: A Radical Preacher in Sixteenth-Century Paris. Sixteenth Century Journal. 18, (1987). https://doi.org/10.2307/2540725.
113.
Parish, H.L., Naphy, W.G.: Religion and superstition in Reformation Europe. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2002).
114.
Philip Benedict: The Saint Bartholomew’s Massacres in the Provinces. The Historical Journal. 21, 205–225 (1978).
115.
Hill, K.: Anabaptism and the World of Printing in Sixteenth-Century Germany. Past & Present. 226, 79–114 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtu045.
116.
Gordon, B.: The Radical Challenge. In: The Swiss Reformation. pp. 191–227. Manchester University Press, Manchester, UK (2002).
117.
Sreenivasan, G.P.: THE SOCIAL ORIGINS OF THE PEASANTS’ WAR OF 1525 IN UPPER SWABIA. Past & Present. 171, 30–65 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1093/past/171.1.30.
118.
Cohn, H.J.: ANTICLERICALISM IN THE GERMAN PEASANTS’ WAR 1525. Past and Present. 83, 3–31 (1979). https://doi.org/10.1093/past/83.1.3.
119.
Williams, G.H.: The radical Reformation. Sixteenth Century Journal Publishers, Kirksville, Mo.
120.
Hill, K.: Baptism, brotherhood, and belief in reformation Germany: Anabaptism and Lutheranism, 1525-1585. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2015).
121.
Coker, J.: ‘Cast Out from among the Saints’: Church Discipline among Anabaptists and English Separatists in Holland, 1590-1620. Reformation. 11, 1–27 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1558/refm.v11.1.
122.
Snyder, A.: The Schleitheim Articles in Light of the Revolution of the Common Man: Continuation or Departure? Sixteenth Century Journal. 16, (1985). https://doi.org/10.2307/2541218.
123.
Bainton, R.H.: The Left Wing of the Reformation. The Journal of Religion. 21, 124–134 (1941). https://doi.org/10.1086/482718.
124.
Harder, L.: Zwingli’s Reaction to the Schleitheim Confession of Faith of the Anabaptists. Sixteenth Century Journal. 11, (1980). https://doi.org/10.2307/2539975.
125.
Christopher Hill: The Lost Ranters? A Critique of J. C. Davis. History Workshop. (1987).
126.
J. C. Davis: Fear, Myth and Furore: Reappraising the ‘Ranters’. Past & Present. (1990).
127.
Davis, J.C.: The historians and the Ranters. In: Fear, myth and history: the Ranters and the historians. pp. 1–16. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [Cambridgeshire] (1986).
128.
Davis, J.C.: Alternative worlds imagined, 1500-1700: essays on radicalism, utopianism and reality. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, Switzerland (2017).
129.
Hill, C.: Ranters and Quakers. In: The world turned upside down: radical ideas during the English Revolution. pp. 231–258. Penguin Books, London (1991).
130.
McGregor, J.F., Reay, B.: Radical religion in the English Revolution. Oxford University Press, New York (1984).
131.
Smith, N. ed: A collection of Ranter writings: spiritual liberty and sexual freedom in the English Revolution. PlutoPress, London (2014).
132.
Gucer, K.: ‘Not Heretofore Extant in Print’: Where the Mad Ranters Are. Journal of the History of Ideas. 61, (2000). https://doi.org/10.2307/3654043.
133.
McDowell, N.: The English radical imagination: culture, religion, and revolution, 1630-1660. Clarendon Press, Oxford (2003).
134.
Bradstock, A.: Ranters. In: Radical religion in Cromwell’s England: a concise history from the English Civil War to the end of the Commonwealth. pp. 75–94. I.B. Tauris, London (2011).
135.
Journal of the House of Commons | British History Online, https://www.british-history.ac.uk/commons-jrnl/vol7?page=6.
136.
Bradstock, A.: Quakers. In: Radical religion in Cromwell’s England: a concise history from the English Civil War to the end of the Commonwealth. pp. 95–116. I.B. Tauris, London (2011).
137.
Coward, B.: Stresses Within the Cromwellian Protectorate, June 1655 - June 1657. In: The Cromwellian Protectorate. pp. 73–93. Manchester University Press, Manchester, UK (2002).
138.
Barry Reay: Popular Hostility Towards Quakers in Mid-Seventeenth-Century England. Social History. 5, (1980).
139.
Hughes, A.: ‘The public profession of these nations’: the national Church in Interregnum England. In: Religion in revolutionary England. pp. 93–114. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2006).
140.
Reay, B.: The Quakers and the English Revolution. Temple Smith, London.
141.
Miller, J.: ‘A Suffering People’: English Quakers and Their Neighbours c.1650–c.1700*. Past & Present. 188, 71–103 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gti018.
142.
Davies, A.: The Quakers in English society, 1655-1725. Clarendon Press, Oxford (2000).
143.
BELL, E.: Eighteenth-Century Quakerism and the Rehabilitation of James Nayler, Seventeenth-Century Radical. The Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 59, 426–446 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022046907002230.
144.
Gwyn, D.: James Nayler and The Lamb’s War. Quaker Studies. 12, 171–188 (2008). https://doi.org/10.3828/quaker.12.2.171.
145.
Henry Kamen: The Spanish Inquisition. (2014).
146.
Moore, R.I.: The formation of a persecuting society: authority and deviance in Western Europe, 950-1250. Blackwell Publishing, Malden, MA (2007).
147.
Edward Peters: Inquisition. University of California Press, Berkeley.
148.
Bernard Hamilton: The Medieval inquisition. , New York.
149.
Kelly, H.A.: Inquisition and the Prosecution of Heresy: Misconceptions and Abuses. Church History. 58, 439–451 (1989). https://doi.org/10.2307/3168207.
150.
Nirenberg, D.: Mass Conversion and Genealogical Mentalities: Jews and Christians in Fifteenth-Century Spain. Past & Present. 174, 3–41 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1093/past/174.1.3.
151.
David Nirenberg: Communities of Violence. Princeton University Press.
152.
Helen Rawlings: The Spanish Inquisition (Historical Association Studies). Blackwell Publishing Limited.
153.
Philippe Wolff: The 1391 Pogrom in Spain. Social Crisis or Not? Past & Present. (1971).
154.
John Huxtable Elliott: The Old World and the New. Cambridge University Press.
155.
Griffiths, N.: Sacred dialogues: Christianity and native religions in the colonial Americas, 1492-1700. [Lulu Enterprises], [England] (2006).
156.
Pagden, A.: The fall of natural man: the American Indian and the origins of comparative ethnology. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [Cambridgeshire] (1982).
157.
Clendinnen, I.: Ambivalent conquests: Maya and Spaniard in Yucatan, 1517-1570. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
158.
Inga Clendinnen: Disciplining the Indians: Franciscan Ideology and Missionary Violence in Sixteenth-Century Yucatán. Past & Present. (1982).
159.
Cervantes, F.: Christianity and the Indians in Early Modern Mexico: the Native Response to the Devil. Historical Research. 66, 177–196 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2281.1993.tb01807.x.
160.
Don, P.L.: Bonfires of culture: Franciscans, indigenous leaders, and the Inquisition in early Mexico, 1524-1540. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.
161.
Patricia Lopes Don: Franciscans, Indian Sorcerers, and the Inquisition in New Spain, 1536-1543. Journal of World History. 17, (2006).
162.
Greenleaf, R.E., James H. Sutton Jr. and Sylvia Leal Carvajal Collection: The Mexican Inquisition of the sixteenth century. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque (1969).
163.
Greenleaf, R.E.: The Inquisition and the Indians of New Spain: A Study in Jurisdictional Confusion. The Americas. 22, 138–166 (1965). https://doi.org/10.2307/979238.
164.
Kagan, R.L., Dyer, A.: Renegade Jew. In: Inquisitorial inquiries: brief lives of secret Jews and other heretics. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (2004).
165.
Kagan, R.L., Dyer, A.: Inquisitorial inquiries: brief lives of secret Jews and other heretics. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (2004).
166.
Kevin P. Siena: Pollution, Promiscuity, and the Pox: English Venereology and the Early Modern Medical Discourse on Social and Sexual Danger. Journal of the History of Sexuality. 8, 553–574 (1998).
167.
Paravicini Bagliani, A., Santi, F.: The regulation of evil: social and cultural attitudes to epidemics in the late Middle Ages. Sismel, Firenze (1998).
168.
Wallis, P.: Plagues, Morality and the Place of Medicine in Early Modern England*. The English Historical Review. CXXI, 1–24 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/cej001.
169.
Jones, C.: Plague and Its Metaphors in Early Modern France. Representations. 97–127 (1996). https://doi.org/10.2307/2928672.
170.
Elmer, P.: The healing arts: health, disease, and society in Europe, 1500-1800. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2004).
171.
Haskell, Y.A. ed: Diseases of the imagination and imaginary disease in the early modern period. Brepols, Turnhout, Belgium (2011).
172.
Moss, S., Peterson, K.L.: Disease, diagnosis, and cure on the early modern stage. Ashgate Pub, Aldershot, Hants, England.
173.
Arrizabalaga, J., Henderson, J., French, R.K.: The great pox: the French disease in Renaissance Europe. Yale University Press, New Haven.
174.
Elmer, P., Grell, O.P.: Health, disease, and society in Europe, 1500-1800: a source book. Manchester University Press, published in association with the Open University, Manchester (2004).
175.
Cohn, S.K.: The black death transformed: disease and culture in early Renaissance Europe. Arnold, London (2002).
176.
Richards, P.: The medieval leper and his northern heirs. D.S. Brewer, Cambridge, Eng.
177.
Rawcliffe, C.: Leprosy in medieval England. Boydell Press, Woodbridge, UK (2009).
178.
Cohn, S.K.: Cultures of plague: medical thinking at the end of the Renaissance. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2010).
179.
Jillings, L.: The Aggression of the Cured Syphilitic: Ulrich von Hutten’s Projection of His Disease as Metaphor. The German Quarterly. 68, (1995). https://doi.org/10.2307/408018.
180.
Najemy, J.M.: Italy in the age of the Renaissance: 1300-1550. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
181.
Marshall, L.: Manipulating the Sacred: Image and Plague in Renaissance Italy. Renaissance Quarterly. 47, 485–532 (1994). https://doi.org/10.2307/2863019.
182.
Bruce Thomas Boehrer: Early Modern Syphilis. Journal of the History of Sexuality. 1, 197–214 (1990).
183.
Siraisi, N.G.: Medieval & early Renaissance medicine: an introduction to knowledge and practice. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
184.
Chiu, R.: Plague and music in the Renaissance. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom (2017).
185.
Burke, P.: Critical essays on Michel Foucault. Scolar Press, Aldershot, Hants., England.
186.
Carrera, E.: Madness and Melancholy in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Spain: New Evidence, New Approaches. Bulletin of Spanish Studies. 87, 1–15 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1080/14753820.2010.530832.
187.
Castel, R.: The regulation of madness: origins of incarceration in France. Polity (1988).
188.
Craig, L.A.: The History of Madness and Mental Illness in the Middle Ages: Directions and Questions. History Compass. 12, 729–744 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12187.
189.
Cross, S.: Bedlam in mind: Seeing and reading historical images of madness. European Journal of Cultural Studies. 15, 19–34 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1177/1367549411424949.
190.
Fabrega, H.: The culture and history of psychiatric stigma in early modern and modern Western societies: A review of recent literature. Comprehensive Psychiatry. 32, 97–119 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1016/0010-440X(91)90002-T.
191.
Foucault, M., Khalfa, J.: History of madness. Routledge, London (2006).
192.
Gilman, S.L.: Seeing the insane: a visual and cultural history of our attitudes toward the mentally ill. Echo Point Books & Media, Brattleboro, Vermont (2014).
193.
Gowland, A.: The Problem of Early Modern Melancholy*. Past & Present. 191, 77–120 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtj012.
194.
Gutting, G.: The Cambridge companion to Foucault. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
195.
Hexter, J.H., Malament, B.C., Bouwsma, W.J.: After the Reformation: essays in honor of J.H. Hexter. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia (1980).
196.
Houston, R.A.: Madness and society in eighteenth-century Scotland. Clarendon Press, Oxford (2000).
197.
Ingram, A.: Patterns of madness in the eighteenth century: a reader. Liverpool University Press, Senate House, U.K. (1998).
198.
Kemp, S., Williams, K.: Demonic possession and mental disorder in medieval and early modern Europe. Psychological Medicine. 17, 21–29 (1987). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291700012940.
199.
Kinsman, R.S.: The Darker vision of the Renaissance: beyond the fields of reason. University of California Press, Berkeley (1974).
200.
Lederer, D.: Madness, religion and the state in early modern Europe: a Bavarian beacon. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2006).
201.
MacDonald, M.: Mystical Bedlam: madness, anxiety, and healing in seventeenth-century England. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1981).
202.
MacDonald, Michael: Social Research. 53,.
203.
MacKinnon, D.: ‘Poor Senseless Bess, Clothed in her Rags and Folly’: Early Modern Women, Madness, and Song in Seventeenth-Century England. Parergon. 18, 119–151 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1353/pgn.2011.0126.
204.
Midelfort, H.C.E.: A history of madness in sixteenth-century Germany. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif.
205.
Midelfort, H.C.E.: Madness and the Problems of Psychological History in the Sixteenth Century. Sixteenth Century Journal. 12, (1981). https://doi.org/10.2307/3003698.
206.
Neely, C.T.: Recent Work in Renaissance Studies: Psychology Did Madness Have a Renaissance. Renaissance Quarterly. 44, 776–791 (1991). https://doi.org/10.2307/2862487.
207.
Neugebauer, R.: Treatment of the mentally ill in medieval and early modern England: A reappraisal. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences. 14, 158–169 (1978). https://doi.org/10.1002/1520-6696(197804)14:2<158::AID-JHBS2300140209>3.0.CO;2-C.
208.
Pietikäinen, P.: Madness: a history. Routledge, London (2015).
209.
Porter, R.: Mind-forg’d manacles: a history of madness in England from the Restoration to the Regency. Athlone Press, London (1987).
210.
Porter, R.: A social history of madness: stories of the insane. Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London.
211.
Porter, R.: Madness: a brief history. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2002).
212.
Guido Ruggiero: Excusable Murder: Insanity and Reason in Early Renaissance Venice. Journal of Social History. 16, 109–119 (1982).
213.
Scalzo, J.: Campanella, Foucault, and Madness in Late-Sixteenth Century Italy. Sixteenth Century Journal. 21, (1990). https://doi.org/10.2307/2540273.
214.
Scull, A.: The most solitary of afflictions: madness and society in Britain, 1700-1900. Yale University Press, New Haven (1993).
215.
Scull, A.: The domestication of madness. Medical History. 27, 233–248 (1983). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0025727300042940.
216.
Scull, A.: Michel Foucault’s history of madness. History of the Human Sciences. 3, 57–67 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1177/095269519000300109.
217.
Still, A., Velody, I.: Rewriting the history of madness: studies in Foucaultʼs Histoire de la folie. Routledge, London (1992).
218.
Strocchia, S.T.: Women on the Edge: Madness, Possession, and Suicide in Early Modern Convents. Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies. 45, 53–77 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1215/10829636-2830016.
219.
Thiher, A.: Revels in madness: insanity in medicine and literature. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor (2004).
220.
Wiltenburg, Joy: Journal of Popular Culture. 21,.
221.
Windholz, G.: The Case of the Renaissance Psychiatrist Peter Meir. Sixteenth Century Journal. 22, (1991). https://doi.org/10.2307/2542729.
222.
Wiltenburg, Joy: Journal of Popular Culture. 21,.
223.
Wiesner, M.E.: Christianity and sexuality in the early modern world: regulating desire, reforming practice. Routledge, London (2010).
224.
Coleman, D.: Moral Formation and Social Control in the Catholic Reformation: The Case of San Juan de Avila. Sixteenth Century Journal. 26, (1995). https://doi.org/10.2307/2541523.
225.
Elizabeth S. Cohen: Seen and known: prostitutes in the cityscape of late-sixteenth-century Rome. Renaissance Studies. 12, 392–409 (1998).
226.
Brackett, J.K.: The Florentine Onesta and the Control of Prostitution, 1403-1680. Sixteenth Century Journal. 24, (1993). https://doi.org/10.2307/2541951.
227.
Bingham, C.: Seventeenth-Century Attitudes toward Deviant Sex. Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 1, (1971). https://doi.org/10.2307/202621.
228.
Cook, M., Mills, R., Trumbach, R., Cocks, H. eds: A gay history of Britain: love and sex between men since the Middle Ages. Greenwood World Publishing, Oxford (2007).
229.
Mentzer, R.A.: Sin and the Calvinists: morals control and the consistory in the Reformed tradition. Truman State University Press, [Place of publication not identified].
230.
Brown, J.C.: Immodest acts: the life of a lesbian nun in Renaissance Italy. Oxford University Press, New York (1986).
231.
Puff, H.: Sodomy in Reformation Germany and Switzerland, 1400-1600. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (2003).
232.
Betteridge, T.: Sodomy in early modern Europe. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2002).
233.
Walsham, A.: Providence in early modern England. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
234.
Cunningham, A., Grell, O.P.: The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse: religion, war, famine, and death in Reformation Europe. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.
235.
Camporesi, P.: The fear of hell: images of damnation and salvation in early modern Europe. Polity, Cambridge (1991).
236.
Bailey, M.D.: Fearful spirits, reasoned follies: the boundaries of superstition in late medieval Europe. Cornell University Press, Ithaca (2016).
237.
Spinks, J.: Monstrous births and visual culture in sixteenth-century Germany. Pickering & Chatto, London (2009).
238.
Crawford, J.: Marvelous Protestantism: monstrous births in post-Reformation England. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (2005).
239.
Parish, H.L. ed: Superstition and magic in early modern Europe: a reader. Bloomsbury Academic, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, London, UK (2015).
240.
Wiesner, M.E.: Christianity and sexuality in the early modern world: regulating desire, reforming practice. Routledge, London (2000).
241.
Beam, S.: Rites of Torture in Reformation Geneva*. Past & Present. 214, 197–219 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtr023.
242.
Parker, C.H., Starr-LeBeau, G.D. eds: Judging faith, punishing sin: inquisitions and consistories in the early modern world. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2017).
243.
Parker, C.H., Starr-LeBeau, G.D. eds: Judging faith, punishing sin: inquisitions and consistories in the early modern world. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2017).
244.
Raymond A. Mentzer: Morals and Moral Regulation in Protestant France. The Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 31, 1–20 (2000).
245.
Elizabeth S. Cohen: Seen and known: prostitutes in the cityscape of late-sixteenth-century Rome. Renaissance Studies. 12, 392–409 (1998).
246.
Allen, P.L.: The wages of sin: sex and disease, past and present. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (2000).
247.
Duberman, M., Vicinus, M., Chauncey, G.: Hidden from history: reclaiming the gay and lesbian past. Penguin Books, London (1991).
248.
Luebke, D.M.: The Counter-Reformation: the essential readings. Blackwell, Malden, Mass (1999).
249.
Barahona, R., Archivo de la Real Chancillería de Valladolid. Sala de Vizcaya: Sex crimes, honour, and the law in early modern Spain: Vizcaya, 1528-1735. University of Toronto Press, Toronto, Ont.
250.
Rublack, U.: The crimes of women in early modern Germany. Clarendon, Oxford (2001).
251.
Cook, M., Mills, R., Trumbach, R., Cocks, H. eds: A gay history of Britain: love and sex between men since the Middle Ages. Greenwood World Publishing, Oxford (2007).
252.
Ferraro, J.M.: Making a Living: The Sex Trade in Early Modern Venice. The American Historical Review. 123, 30–59 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/123.1.30.
253.
Roberts, P.: Peace, Ritual, and Sexual Violence during the Religious Wars. Past & Present. 214, 75–99 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtr019.
254.
Healey, J.: Kin support and the English poor: evidence from Lancashire, .1620–1710. Historical Research. 92, 318–339 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2281.12255.
255.
A Typology of Travellers: Migration, Justice, and Vagrancy in Warwickshire, 1670-1730. Rural History. 23, (2012).
256.
Hitchcock, D.: ‘He is the Vagabond that Hath No Habitation in the Lord’: The Representation of Quakerism as Vagrancy in Interregnum England, c. 1650–1660. Cultural and Social History. 15, 21–37 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1080/14780038.2018.1427340.
257.
Healey, J.: The Arrival and Growth of Poor Relief. In: The First Century of Welfare: Poverty and Poor Relief in Lancashire, 1620-1730. pp. 55–81. Boydell Press (2014).
258.
Heal, F.: Hospitality Among the Populace. In: Hospitality in early modern England. Clarendon Press, Oxford [England] (1990).
259.
Archer, I.W.: THE CHARITY OF EARLY MODERN LONDONERS. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 12, 223–244 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0080440102000075.
260.
Ben-Amos, I.K.: Gifts and Favors: Informal Support in Early Modern England. The Journal of Modern History. 72, 295–338 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1086/315991.
261.
Judith M. Bennett: Conviviality and Charity in Medieval and Early Modern England. Past & Present. (1992).
262.
Collinson, P.: Puritanism and the Poor. In: Pragmatic Utopias: Ideals and Communities, 1200-1630. pp. 242–258. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2002).
263.
Christopher Dyer: POVERTY AND ITS RELIEF IN LATE MEDIEVAL ENGLAND. Past & Present. (2012).
264.
Griffiths, P., Fox, A., Hindle, S.: The experience of authority in early modern England. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1996).
265.
Hindle, S.: The birthpangs of welfare: poor relief and parish governance in seventeenth-century Warwickshire. Dugdale Soc, Stratford-Upon-Avon (2000).
266.
WILLIAMS, M.: ‘Our Poore People in Tumults Arose’: Living in Poverty in Earls Colne, Essex, 1560–1640. Rural History. 13, 123–143 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956793302000079.
267.
Elmer, P.: Witchcraft, Witch-Hunting, and Politics in Early Modern England. In: Witchcraft, witch-hunting, and politics in early modern England. pp. 16–68. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2016).
268.
Gibson, M.: The early modern context: a case study of early modern Britain. In: Witchcraft. pp. 10–36. Routledge, Milton (2018).
269.
Gaskill, M.: Witchcraft: a very short introduction. Oxford University Press (2010).
270.
Thomas, K.: Religion and the decline of magic: studies in popular beliefs in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England. Penguin Books, London (1991).
271.
Sharpe, J.A.: Witchcraft in early modern England. Longman, Harlow, England (2001).
272.
Millar, C.-R.: Witchcraft, the devil, and emotions in early modern England. Routledge, Taylor Francis Group, London (2017).
273.
Gaskill, M.: Witchcraft Trials in England. In: The Oxford Handbook of Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe and Colonial America. pp. 283–299. Oxford University Press (2014).
274.
Sharpe, J.A.: Instruments of darkness: witchcraft in early modern England. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.
275.
Williams, S.F.: Damnable practises: witches, dangerous women, and music in seventeenth-century English broadside ballads. Ashgate, Farnham, Surrey (2015).
276.
Walker, G.: The Strangeness of the Familiar : Witchcraft and the Law in Early Modern England. In: The extraordinary and the everyday in early modern England: essays in celebration of the work of Bernard Capp. pp. 105–124. Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2010).
277.
Jo Bath: The treatment of potential witches in North-East England, c. 1649-1680. In: Witchcraft and the Act of 1604. pp. 129–146. Brill, Leiden (2008).
278.
Carr, V.: Witches and the Dead: The Case for the English Ghost Familiar. Folklore. 130, 282–299 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1080/0015587X.2018.1545735.
279.
Healey, J.: Kin support and the English poor: evidence from Lancashire, .1620–1710. Historical Research. 92, 318–339 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2281.12255.
280.
Dabhoiwala, F.: Writing Petitions in Early Modern England. In: Braddick, M.J. and Innes, J. (eds.) Suffering and happiness in England, 1550-1850: narratives and representations : a collection to honour Paul Slack. pp. 127–148. Oxford University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom (2017).
281.
Hitchcock, D.: ‘He is the Vagabond that Hath No Habitation in the Lord’: The Representation of Quakerism as Vagrancy in Interregnum England, c. 1650–1660. Cultural and Social History. 15, 21–37 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1080/14780038.2018.1427340.
282.
Waddell, B.: Economic Immorality and Social Reformation in English Popular Preaching, 1585–1625. Cultural and Social History. 5, 165–182 (2008). https://doi.org/10.2752/147800408X299620.
283.
Waddell, B.: Chapter 3 - Communal Bonds: Solidarity, Alterity, and Collective Action. In: God, Duty and Community in English Economic Life, 1660-1720. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2013).
284.
Slack, P.: Poverty and policy in Tudor and Stuart England. Longman, London (1988).
285.
Hindle, S.: On the parish?: the micro-politics of poor relief in rural England, c.1550-1750. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2009).
286.
Steve King: Reconstructing Lives: The Poor, the Poor Law and Welfare in Calverley, 1650-1820. Social History. 22, (1997).
287.
Houston, R.: Peasant petitions: social relations and economic life on landed estates, 1600-1850. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2014).
288.
Walter, J.: Public transcripts, popular agency and the politics of subsistence in early modern England. In: Negotiating Power in Early Modern Society: Order, Hierarchy and Subordination in Britain and Ireland. pp. 123–148. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2001). https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511660207.006.
289.
David Nirenberg: Communities of Violence. Princeton University Press.