-
Adriaan Koerbagh (1633 – 1669) was a
Dutch physician, scholar, and
writer who was a
critic of
religion and
conventional morality. He was in the circle...
- Balling,
Jarich Jelles,
Lodewijk Meyer,
Johannes Bouwmeester and
Adriaen Koerbagh.
Amsterdam was
tolerant of
religious diversity so long as it was practiced...
-
published by
Adriaan Koerbagh in 1664 Een
Bloemhof van
allerley lieflijkheyd ("A
Flower Garden of All
Sorts of Delights"),
written by
Koerbagh under the pseudonym...
- [əm ˈblumɦɔf] is a
dictionary published in 1668 and
written by
Adriaan Koerbagh under his own name (the ‘pseudonym’
Vreederijk Waarmond being part of the...
-
though he
himself was
ethnically Serbian.
Adriaan Koerbagh 1633–1669
Dutch A
follower of
Spinoza Koerbagh was
among the most
radical figures of the Age of...
-
Polonorum quos
Unitarios vocant,
Description of
Africa (Dapper), Een
Bloemhof (
Koerbagh), The Isle of
Pines (Neville) 1669 in
literature – Jean Racine's Britannicus...
- in 1656. A like-minded
friend and
kindred intellectual spirit,
Adriaan Koerbagh (1633–1669), had
published two
works scathing of religion.
Because they...
-
Comenius condemned him for
supporting the proto-Enlightenment
thinker Adriaan Koerbagh. Crenshaw, P. (2006) Rembrandt's Bankruptcy. The artist, his
patrons and...
-
views as
placing him
among notorious atheists:
Thomas Hobbes,
Adriaan Koerbagh,
Lodewijk Meyer and
Baruch Spinoza. Eric
Walten came to his defence, attacking...
- lexicographer, etc.
Adriaan Kluit (1735–1807),
Dutch linguist Adriaan Koerbagh (1633–1669),
Dutch scholar and
writer Adriaan Kortlandt (1918–2009), Dutch...