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Seventh-Day Men Sabbatarians and Sabbatarianism in England and Wales, 1600-1800

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ISBN-10: 0198267525

ISBN-13: 9780198267522

Edition: 1994

Authors: Bryan W. Ball

List price: $78.50
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"Seventh-Day Men" was the seventeenth-century name given to an emerging and important body of Christians who believed in the strict observance of Saturday, rather than Sunday, as the Sabbath. This is the first-ever fully documented study of these people, who in their heyday were at the center of debate and controversy among the leading writers of the age. This study provides clear evidence that this sabbatarian body of Christians was far more extensive than has so far been recognized, and establishes its considerable significance within the history of the church in the period.
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Book details

List price: $78.50
Copyright year: 1994
Publisher: Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 11/17/1994
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 416
Size: 5.75" wide x 8.75" long x 1.16" tall
Weight: 1.430
Language: English

Illustrations
Abbreviations
Introduction
Precedents and Antecedents
John Traske and Theophilus Brabourne
The Mill Yard Church
The London Calvinistic Sabbatarian Churches
The South and South-West
The Chilterns and the Thames Valley
The Cotswolds and the Severn Valley
South Wales and the Borders
East Anglia
The Northern Counties
Conclusion
App. I Ireland
App. II Notes on Supposed Sabbatarian Congregations, 1650-1750
App. III The More-Chamberlen Church Reconsidered
App. IV An Annotated Chronological Bibliography of Seventh-day Literature to 1750
App. V Distribution of the Sabbatarian Movement to 1800 by Counties
Bibliography
Index of Places
Index of Persons
General Index