Fraternity-Testvériség, 1959 (37. évfolyam, 1-12. szám)

1959-08-01 / 8. szám

6 FRATERNITY court at Vienna often heard his thunder as the leaders of the Counter-Reformation continually came back to the attack. Finally, in 1644, he entered Hungary with an army and thus he, too, became involved in the thirty-year war; and com­ing out of it victorious, he signed the Peace of Linz (1645). This was an agreement which com­pletely clarified those clauses in the Peace of Vienna about which any misunderstanding what­soever could arise. By “freedom of religion”, “freedom to use one’s own church building” was explicitly understood, the peasantry were to be given complete freedom of choice, and the mag­nates were to build their peasants churches if they had none and yet desired a place of Prot- estant^ worship; Reformed churches occupied by George Rakoczy I, Prince of Transylvania Roman Catholics were to be returned, all further confiscation of church buildings were to be for­bidden, and lastly, Protestants were to be per­mitted to bring their affairs to the national assembly to be dealt with by their Protestant peers without let or hindrance! (To be continued)

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