New Essays on the Political Thought of the Huguenots of the Refuge

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John Christian Laursen
BRILL, Nov 1, 1994 - History - 227 pages
The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 led to a large diaspora of French Huguenots, known as the Refuge. Spreading throughout Europe, many of these Huguenots used their literary and polemical talents in the development of political ideas that would help them in their efforts to return to France, or in their adjustment to living outside of France. Arguably, their predicament turned some of them into cosmopolitans and instigated their contributions to the theory and practice of freedom of the press and economic freedom.
As in the case of other diaspora cultures, expulsion from France evidently drove the refugees to new levels of political awareness and new heights of argumentative creativity. The work of the famous and industrious refugee Pierre Bayle has been credited with inspiring the great figures of Enlightenment and modernity. Too often, however, the work of less famous figures who contributed to the ethos of this period has been neglected. This volume contains explorations in the originality and influence of many of those figures, while pointing to the need for more work in the area.

Contributors include: Daniel Brühlmeier, Pauline Haour, T.J. Hochstrasser, John Christian Laursen, Fabrizio Lomonaco, Bertram E. Schwarzbach, and Simone Zurbuchen.
 

Contents

INTRODUCTION
1
NATURAL LAW THEORY OBLIGATION AND RESISTANCE IN THE HUGUENOT DIASPORA
15
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52
CHAPTER TWO NATURAL LAW AND EARLY ECONOMIC THOUGHT IN BARBEYRAC BURLAMAQUI AND VATTEL
53
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72
CLANDESTINE MANUSCRIPTS AND THE LIMITS OF FREEDOM OF THE PRESS IN THE HUGUENOT NETHERLANDS
73
ISAAC DE BEAUSOBRE IN BERLIN
109
CHAPTER FIVE ANTOINE COUR T AND REFUGEE POLITICAL THOUGHT 17191752
131
CHAPTER SIX JAUCOURT REPUBLICANISM AND TOLERATION
155
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170
CHAPTER SEVEN HUGUENOT CRITICAL THEORY AND IUS MAIESTATIS IN HUBER AND ALTHUSIUS
171
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
202
BIBLIOGRAPHY
203
INDEX
219
Copyright

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About the author (1994)

John Christian Laursen, Ph.D. (1985) in Political Science, The Johns Hopkins University, teaches political theory at the University of California, Riverside. He has published many articles on the history of political thought and is the author of "The Politics of Skepticism in the Ancients, Montaigne, Hume, and Kant" (Brill, 1992).

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