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- Marie Dentière - Wikipedia
Martin Luther 's preaching against monasticism led her to flee to Strasbourg in 1524 to escape persecution — not only for abandoning her position as a nun, but for converting to the Reformation
- Marie Dentière - World History Encyclopedia
If she did hold a high office (which seems likely based on the later account by de Jussie), she would have had to have entered the convent prior to 1521 because she renounced Catholicism and fled the convent for Strasbourg in 1524
- Women of the Reformation: Marie Dentiére - Credo Magazine
She left the convent in 1524 to escape persecution and fled to Strasbourg, which had become a refuge for Protestants There she met Simon Robert, a former priest who had also accepted the truth of salvation by faith alone
- The First Lady in France: Marie Dentière (c. 1495–1561)
Captivated by Martin Luther’s breakthrough theology, Marie left the convent by 1525 and moved to Strasbourg to officially join the highly charged Reformation movement In that same year, she made a second radical move when she married a former priest, Simon Robert
- Marie Dentière, or d’Ennetières (c. 1495-1561) - Musée protestant
She converted to the Lutheran Reformation around 1524, so she had to leave her convent and flee to Strasbourg, where she married Simon Robert, a former priest and member of the “Cenacle of Meaux
- Marie Dentiere d. 1561 - Women Priests
She had adopted the views of the religious reformers This was an ecclesiastical and perhaps a civil crime, and Marie fled to Strasbourg, a refuge for Protestants from both Germany and France
- Women to Know: Marie Dentière - ULC
She moved to Strasbourg to escape persecution for abandoning her order and converting to the Reformation The city was a refuge for John Calvin and others who were promoting Luther’s Theses
- The Early Modern Teacher: Marie Dentière: An Outspoken . . . - JSTOR
in mystery, but the few historical records of her reveal a determined woman whose religious convictions often led her against the grain 1 She left the security of her convent and her family in Tournai in the early 1520s in order to follow French religious reformers to a safe haven in Strasbourg
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