Fraternity-Testvériség, 1958 (36. évfolyam, 1-11. szám)
1958-11-01 / 11. szám
16 FRATERNITY for help in the double battle they had to wage against, first, Unitarianism and then the Counter- Reformation. In the 16th century western Protestantism was still glad to learn from Hungarian theologians, especially from men like Stephen Kis Szegedi; in the 17th century, however, it was to the west that Hungarians themselves turned. Thereafter they continually kept their eyes fixed on developments in the west, owing to their great need of assistSlatue of Gáspár Karolyi ance in the new situation they came to face. Meanwhile, we might just point in passing to the fact that the 16th century was the period of a real Hungarian renaissance, in the rise of an