
The Correspondence of Erasmus. Letters 2357 to 2471.
Erasmus, Desiderius. Ed(S): Estes, James M.
Many of the letters in this volume, which covers the period August 1530 to March 1531, reflect Erasmus' anxieties over events at the Diet of Augsburg (June-November 1530), at which the first of many attempts to achieve a negotiated settlement of the religious division in Germany came to a rancorous conclusion, thus fostering the fear that religious controversy would eventually lead to war. His other chief concerns were the continued attacks on him by Catholic critics who regarded him as a clandestine Lutheran, and the insistence of many evangelical reformers that he was their spiritual father. The literary output of the period covered includes major works aimed at members of both groups.
Volume 17 of the Collected Works of Erasmus series.
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Reviews for The Correspondence of Erasmus. Letters 2357 to 2471.
Lisa Jardine
Common Knowledge
‘Academic publishing does not get any better than this: durably bound, expertly annotated, beautifully translated editions of the works of one of the finest scholars in the illustrious history of the Christian Church.’
Michael Bauman
Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society
‘The Collected Works of Erasmus project has long since established a new standard for scholarly translation series to emulate. Not only have the English versions represented Erasmus’ writings in crisp and accessible language, but meticulous editorial scholarship has placed the author’s thought and work in their proper intellectual contexts.’
Jerry H. Bentley
Renaissance Quarterly
‘One of the most ambitious, meticulous, and essential scholarly projects now underway.’
Willis G. Regier
Modern Language Notes
‘CE invites readers to penetrate mysteries which could not be known without the publication of these letters… The scholarship is of high order. Well bound and illustrated, the University of Toronto Press continues to enhance Erasmus’ image.’
Darrell Sutton
The Quarterly Review July 2017
"These letters offer substantial material for scholars interested in intellectual and Reformation history and Erasmus’s life and thought during this period. The volume’s presentation, translation, and clarifying annotations make this an excellent scholarly source. "
Robert Erle Barham
Renaissance Quarterly, Vol. 71, No. 2
"These translations should be welcomed not only by Erasmus scholars but by anyone interested in the intellectual, religious, and political developments of this crucial point in the Reformation."
Amy Nelson Burnett, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Erasmus Studies, vol 38