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Author
dc.contributor.author
G. Etényi, Nóra 
Availability Date
dc.date.accessioned
2021-06-01T09:25:24Z
Availability Date
dc.date.available
2021-06-01T09:25:24Z
Release
dc.date.issued
2021
uri
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10831/55654
Language
dc.language.iso
angolhu_HU
Title
dc.title
Protestant “Athleta Christi” in the Propaganda of the Great Turkish War: The Demise of Georg Friedrich, Duke of Wurttemberg at Košice, 1685hu_HU
Type
dc.type
folyóiratcikkhu_HU
Version
dc.description.version
megjelent változathu_HU
Language
dc.language.rfc3066
eng
Rights
dc.rights.holder
ELTE BTKhu_HU
Abstract in English
dc.description.abstracteng
The unexpected death of the young Duke Georg Friedrich of Wurttemberg (1657–1685) on 18 October 1685 at the siege of Košice came as tremendous shock to the public of the Holy Roman Empire. The ducal family of Wurttemberg emphasized the principality’s participation and terrible loss in the war against the Ottoman Empire with a spectacular funeral and some carefully composed propaganda of ultimate honor. The principality of Wurttemberg traditionally maintained a special relationship with the Hungarian Lutheran nobility and citizens. The death of the duke changed the attitudes of the Hungarian Lutheran elite since the principality, which provided them with significant support, had suffered such a great loss in the political, economic and spiritual center of Upper Hungary, Košice, while the young Lutheran prince of Wurttemberg, fighting among the imperial troops, could have helped with the negotiations about the surrender of the city. The funeral speeches in the collection of sermons highlighted various aspects of the royal image, and this was complemented by a volume of fine poems compiled by professors at the University of Tübingen. The decency of the fallen Prince Georg Friedrich of Wurttemberg, which included both traditional topos and a modern set of values, represented several interdependent political interests, representing the high standard, literacy, and effectiveness of the propaganda of the War of Reconquest.hu_HU
Doi ID
dc.identifier.doi
10.47074/HSCE.2021-1.05
abbreviated journal
dc.identifier.jabbrev
HSCEhu_HU
Journal
dc.identifier.jtitle
Historial Studies on Central Europehu_HU
Last Page
dc.identifier.lpage
128.hu_HU
First Page
dc.identifier.spage
97.hu_HU
Volume Number
dc.identifier.volume
1.hu_HU
access
dc.rights.access
hozzáférhetőhu_HU
Keyword English
dc.subject.en
Historial Studies on Central Europehu_HU
Keyword English
dc.subject.en
HSCEhu_HU
Keyword English
dc.subject.en
Political Representationhu_HU
Keyword English
dc.subject.en
funeralhu_HU
Keyword English
dc.subject.en
ceremonyhu_HU
Keyword English
dc.subject.en
Lutheran communityhu_HU
Keyword English
dc.subject.en
Great Turkish War (1683–1699)hu_HU
Class
dc.type.genre
publikáció/alkotáshu_HU
Type
dc.type.resrep
tudományoshu_HU
Author
dc.contributor.inst
ELTE Bölcsészettudományi Kar Történeti Intézet Középkori Történeti Tanszék, Kora Újkori Történeti Tanszékhu_HU
Type
dc.type.type
folyóiratcikkhu_HU
Release Date
dc.description.issuedate
2021hu_HU


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Protestant “Athleta Christi” in the Propaganda of the Great Turkish War: The Demise of Georg Friedrich, Duke of Wurttemberg at Košice, 1685
 

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