See also:JURIEU, See also:PIERRE (1637-1713) , See also:French See also:Protestant divine, was See also:born at Mer, in See also:Orleanais, where his See also:father was a Protestant pastor. He studied at See also:Saumur and See also:Sedan under his grandfather, Pierre See also:Dumoulin, and under Leblanc de See also:Beaulieu. After completing his studies in See also:- HOLLAND
- HOLLAND, CHARLES (1733–1769)
- HOLLAND, COUNTY AND PROVINCE OF
- HOLLAND, HENRY FOX, 1ST BARON (1705–1774)
- HOLLAND, HENRY RICH, 1ST EARL OF (1S9o-,649)
- HOLLAND, HENRY RICHARD VASSALL FOX, 3RD
- HOLLAND, JOSIAH GILBERT (1819-1881)
- HOLLAND, PHILEMON (1552-1637)
- HOLLAND, RICHARD, or RICHARD DE HOLANDE (fl. 1450)
- HOLLAND, SIR HENRY, BART
Holland and See also:England, Jurieu received See also:Anglican ordination; returning to See also:France he was ordained again and succeeded his father as pastor of the See also:- CHURCH
- CHURCH (according to most authorities derived from the Gr. Kvpcaxov [&wµa], " the Lord's [house]," and common to many Teutonic, Slavonic and other languages under various forms—Scottish kirk, Ger. Kirche, Swed. kirka, Dan. kirke, Russ. tserkov, Buig. cerk
- CHURCH, FREDERICK EDWIN (1826-1900)
- CHURCH, GEORGE EARL (1835–1910)
- CHURCH, RICHARD WILLIAM (1815–189o)
- CHURCH, SIR RICHARD (1784–1873)
church at Mer. Soon after this he published his first See also:work, Examen de livre de la See also:reunion du Christianisme (1671). In 1694 his Traite de la devotion led to his See also:appointment as See also:professor of See also:theology and See also:Hebrew at Sedan, where he soon became also pastor. A See also:year later he published his A pologie pour la morale See also:des Reformes. He obtained a high reputation, but his work was impaired by his controversial See also:temper, which frequently See also:developed into an irritated fanaticism, though he was always entirely sincere. He was called by his adversaries " the See also:Goliath of the Protestants." On the suppression of the See also:academy of Sedan in 1681, Jurieu received an invitation to a church at See also:Rouen, but, afraid to remain in France on See also:account of his forthcoming work, La Politique du clerge de France, he went to Holland and was pastor of the Walloon church of See also:Rotterdam till his See also:death on the 11th of See also:January 1713. He was also professor at the ecole illustre. Jurieu did much to help those who suffered by the revocation of the See also:Edict of See also:Nantes (1685). He himself turned for See also:consolation to the See also:Apocalypse, and succeeded in persuading himself (Accomplissement des propheties, 1686) that the overthrow of See also:Antichrist (i.e. the papal church) would take See also:place in 1689. H. M. See also:Baird says that " this persuasion, however fanciful the grounds on which it was based, exercised no small See also:influence in forwarding the success of the designs of See also:- WILLIAM
- WILLIAM (1143-1214)
- WILLIAM (1227-1256)
- WILLIAM (1J33-1584)
- WILLIAM (A.S. Wilhelm, O. Norse Vilhidlmr; O. H. Ger. Willahelm, Willahalm, M. H. Ger. Willehelm, Willehalm, Mod.Ger. Wilhelm; Du. Willem; O. Fr. Villalme, Mod. Fr. Guillaume; from " will," Goth. vilja, and " helm," Goth. hilms, Old Norse hidlmr, meaning
- WILLIAM (c. 1130-C. 1190)
- WILLIAM, 13TH
William of See also:Orange in the invasion of England." Jurieu defended the doctrines of Protestantism with See also:great ability against the attacks of See also:Antoine See also:Arnauld, Pierre See also:Nicole and See also:Bossuet, but was equally ready to enter into dispute with his See also:fellow Protestant divines (with See also:- LOUIS
- LOUIS (804–876)
- LOUIS (893–911)
- LOUIS, JOSEPH DOMINIQUE, BARON (1755-1837)
- LOUIS, or LEWIS (from the Frankish Chlodowich, Chlodwig, Latinized as Chlodowius, Lodhuwicus, Lodhuvicus, whence-in the Strassburg oath of 842-0. Fr. Lodhuwigs, then Chlovis, Loys and later Louis, whence Span. Luiz and—through the Angevin kings—Hungarian
Louis Du See also:Moulin and See also:Claude Payon, for instance) when their opinions differed from his own even on See also:minor matters. The See also:bitter.ness and persistency of his attacks on his colleague Pierre See also:Bayle led to the latter being deprived of his See also:chair in 1693.
One of Jurieu's See also:chief See also:works is Lettres pastorales adressees aux fideles de France (3 vols., Rotterdam, 1686–1687; Eng. trans., 1689), which, notwithstanding the vigilance of the See also:police, found its way into France and produced a deep impression on the Protestant See also:population. His last important work was the Histoire critique des dogmes et des tulles (1704; Eng. trans., 1715). He wrote a great number of controversial works.
See the See also:article in See also:Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopadie; also H. M. Baird, The See also:Huguenots and the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes (1895).
End of Article: JURIEU, PIERRE (1637-1713)
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