Gender, Space, and Religious Privacy in Amsterdam

Silva Perez and Kristensen examine the intersection of gender and religious traditions for the use of space for two distinct religious groups: the Amsterdam beguines, a Catholic community, and the Portuguese Nation, a Jewish community. In the religiously diverse environment of seventeenth century A...

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Autores principales: Natália Da Silva Perez, Peter Thule Kristensen
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
NL
Publicado: Open Journals 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/921442246da54d96957aaf7abe542ba9
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:921442246da54d96957aaf7abe542ba92021-11-29T13:45:54ZGender, Space, and Religious Privacy in Amsterdam10.52024/tseg.110431572-17012468-9068https://doaj.org/article/921442246da54d96957aaf7abe542ba92021-11-01T00:00:00Zhttps://tseg.nl/article/view/11043https://doaj.org/toc/1572-1701https://doaj.org/toc/2468-9068 Silva Perez and Kristensen examine the intersection of gender and religious traditions for the use of space for two distinct religious groups: the Amsterdam beguines, a Catholic community, and the Portuguese Nation, a Jewish community. In the religiously diverse environment of seventeenth century Amsterdam, only the Dutch Reformed Church was officially authorized to have visible places of worship. Unsanctioned religious groups such as the beguines and the Portuguese Nation had to make arrangements to regulate visibility and access to their spaces of worship. Using privacy as an analytical lens, the authors discuss how strategies employed by the two groups changed over the course of the century.   Natália Da Silva PerezPeter Thule KristensenOpen JournalsarticleSeventeenth CenturyAmsterdamPrivacyGenderSocial history and conditions. Social problems. Social reformHN1-995Economic history and conditionsHC10-1085ENNLTijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis, Vol 18, Iss 3 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
NL
topic Seventeenth Century
Amsterdam
Privacy
Gender
Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reform
HN1-995
Economic history and conditions
HC10-1085
spellingShingle Seventeenth Century
Amsterdam
Privacy
Gender
Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reform
HN1-995
Economic history and conditions
HC10-1085
Natália Da Silva Perez
Peter Thule Kristensen
Gender, Space, and Religious Privacy in Amsterdam
description Silva Perez and Kristensen examine the intersection of gender and religious traditions for the use of space for two distinct religious groups: the Amsterdam beguines, a Catholic community, and the Portuguese Nation, a Jewish community. In the religiously diverse environment of seventeenth century Amsterdam, only the Dutch Reformed Church was officially authorized to have visible places of worship. Unsanctioned religious groups such as the beguines and the Portuguese Nation had to make arrangements to regulate visibility and access to their spaces of worship. Using privacy as an analytical lens, the authors discuss how strategies employed by the two groups changed over the course of the century.  
format article
author Natália Da Silva Perez
Peter Thule Kristensen
author_facet Natália Da Silva Perez
Peter Thule Kristensen
author_sort Natália Da Silva Perez
title Gender, Space, and Religious Privacy in Amsterdam
title_short Gender, Space, and Religious Privacy in Amsterdam
title_full Gender, Space, and Religious Privacy in Amsterdam
title_fullStr Gender, Space, and Religious Privacy in Amsterdam
title_full_unstemmed Gender, Space, and Religious Privacy in Amsterdam
title_sort gender, space, and religious privacy in amsterdam
publisher Open Journals
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/921442246da54d96957aaf7abe542ba9
work_keys_str_mv AT nataliadasilvaperez genderspaceandreligiousprivacyinamsterdam
AT peterthulekristensen genderspaceandreligiousprivacyinamsterdam
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