Online Encyclopedia

LIBERTINES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 543 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LIBERTINES  , the

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nickname, rather than the name, given to various
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political and social parties . It is futile to deduce the name from the Libertines of Acts vi . 9; these were " sons of freedmen," for it is vain to make them citizens of an imaginary Libertum, or to substitute (with Beza) Libustines, in the sense of inhabitants of
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Libya . In a sense akin to the
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modern use of the
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term " libertine," i.e a person who sets the rules of morality, &c., at
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defiance, the word seems first to have been applied, as a stigma, to Anabaptists in the Low Countries (Mark Pattison, Essays, ii . 38) . It has become especially attached to the liberal party in Geneva, opposed to Calvin and carrying on the tradition of the Liberators in that city; but the term was never applied to them till after Calvin's
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death (F . W . Kampschulte, Johann Calvin) . Calvin, who wrote against the " Libertins qui se nomment Spirituelz " (1545), never confused them with his political antagonists in Geneva, called Perrinistes from their leader Amadeo Perrin . The
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objects of Calvin's polemic were the Anabaptists above mentioned, whose first obscure leader was Coppin of Lisle, followed by Quintin of Hennegau, by whom and his disciples, Bertram
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des
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Moulins and Claude Perseval, the principles of the
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sect were disseminated in France . Quintin was put to death as a heretic at Tournai in 1546 . His most notable follower was Antoine Pocquet, a native of Enghien, Belgium, priest and almoner (1540-1549), afterwards pensioner of the queen of Navarre, who was a guest of Bucer at Strassburg (1543–1544) and died some time after 156o .

Calvin (who had met Quintin in

Paris) describes the doctrines he impugns as pantheistic and antinomian . See Choisy in Herzog-Hauck's Realencyklopadie (1902) . (A .

End of Article: LIBERTINES
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