The survival of the Jesuits in the low countries, 1773-1850 /edited by Leo Kenis, Marc Lindeijer. - Leuven, Belgium : Leuven University Press, (c)2019. - 1 online resource (389 pages) - KADOC studies on religion, culture, & society 25. .

Includes bibliographies and index.

In 1773, Pope Clement XIV suppressed the Society of Jesus. For the 823 Jesuits living in the Low Countries, it meant the end of their institutional religious life. In the Austrian Netherlands, the Jesuits were put under strict surveillance, but in the Dutch Republic they were able to continue their missionary work. It is this regional contrast and the opportunities it offered for the Order to survive that make the Low Countries an exceptional and interesting case in Jesuit history.00Just as in White Russia, former Jesuits and new Jesuits in the Low Countries prepared for the restoration of the Order, with the help of other religious, priests, and lay benefactors. In 1814, eight days before the restoration of the Society by Pope Pius VII, the novitiate near Ghent opened with eleven candidates from all over the United Netherlands. Barely twenty years later, the Order in the Low Countries - by then counting one hundred members - formed an independent Belgian Province. A separate Dutch Province followed in 1850. Obviously, the reestablishment, with new churches and new colleges, carried a heavy survival burden: in the face of their old enemies and the black legends they revived, the Jesuits had to retrieve their true identity, which had been suppressed for forty years.



9789461663191 9461663196


Jesuits--History--Benelux countries--18th century.
Jesuits--History--Benelux countries--19th century.


Electronic Books.

BX3740 / .S878 2019