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        1. ¦X¤@§Ì¥S·|¡]Unitas Fratrum¡^
        1415¦~¡A¬ù¿«J´µ¥H²§ºÝ¤§¦W³Q¤Ñ¥D±Ð¿N¦º«á¡A¸òÀH¥Lªº¤H¾D¹J·¥¤jªº¹G¢¡CJ´µªº«H®{¤À¬°¤T¬£¡A¨ä¤¤¦³¤@¬£¬J¤£»P¬Fªv§´¨ó¡A¤]¤£¥HªZ¤O§Üª§¡A¹çÄ@¬°«H¥õ¨üW¡C¨ä¤¤¤@¦ì©¼±o°ò§Q¥q°ò¡]Peter 
        Chelischizki¡^¡A¼g¤U¤@¥»¡u«H¥õ¤§ºô¡v¡A±N±Ð·|¤ñ³ë¦¨¤@´É©Ð¤l¡C³o´É©Ð¤l¾ú¸g¦h¦~¡A¤w¦¨¤F¤@Ó˶òµI·´ªº¼o¼V¡A¦Ó¥L̪º¥Øªº¡A´N¬On±q³o¨ÇÂ_«®´Ý¾Àªº¥ËÄt¤¤¡A§ä¥X³o´É©Ð¤lªº¯u¥¿®Ú°ò¡A³vº¥¥[¥H«ì´_¡C³o¤@¯Z¨ü¹G¢ªºªi§Æ¦Ì¨È«H®{¡A¸ú¦bªi§Æ¦Ì¨ÈªºªÖ¥Ë¨¦¡]Kunwald¡^ªº§ø²ø¸Ì©w©~¥Í¬¡¡C1457¦~¡A¥L̷̨Ӹt¸gªºì«h¡A³]¥ß¤F±Ð·|¡AºÙ¬°¡u¦X¤@ªº§Ì¥SÌ¡v¡]United 
        Brothers¡^¡A¤]´N¬O¼¯º¸ºû¨È±Ð·|ªº«e¨¡C¥LÌ»{¬°¦Û¤v¬¡µÛ¤D¬O¬°¤Fn¨Æ©^¯«¡AÀ³¦b¤Z¨Æ¤W¬°¯«¦Ó¬¡¡C¥LÌ©¼¦¹¬Û·R¡A¤¬¬ÛÄU«j¡A¹LµÛ¦wÀR»P·q°@ªº¥Í¬¡¡CµL½×¬O¥Í¬¡©Î¬O¨Æ©^¤W¡A³£¬°ºaÄ£¯«¦Ó¦æ¡C
        ªi§Æ¦Ì¨Èªº«H®{¦bªÖ¥Ë¨¦¤¤¥ÀRªº¹L¤F¤¤Q¦~ªº¥Í¬¡¡C1515¦~¡A§ó¥¿±Ð¦b¼w°êè°_¨B¡A«H©^¤Ñ¥D±Ðªº¬Ó«Ò©M±Ð¬ÓÁp¦X°_¨Ó§ðÀ»·s±Ð«H®{¡A´X¥G±N¥LÌ·Àµ´¡C¤§«á¡A«K¤@ª½¦³³°³°ÄòÄòªº¹G¢¡C1548¦~¡A¼w¬Ó¤U¥O±N¥LÌ»°¨ìªiÄõ¡A¦Ü²×¡A¥L̦b¶ø´µ±ä¬¥¡]Ostrorog¡^¦w¹y¡A¦b¨º¸Ì¼s¶ÇºÖµ¡A«Ø¥ß±Ð·|¡C1556¦~¡Aªi§Æ¦Ì¨È¬Ó«Òã³\¥L̦^¨ì®a¶m¡A«ì´_»E·|¡C±Ð·|¤j¦Ó¿³©ô¡A¹M¤Îªi§Æ¦Ì¨È¡B¼¯º¸ºû¨È©MªiÄõ¤T¬Ù¡C1571¦~¡A¤@¦ìªiÄõ¶Q±Ú¨Ó¨ì¥L̪º»E·|¤¤¡A·P¹Äªº»¡¡G¡u¥Ã¥Íªº¯«°Ú¡A§Ú¤ß¸Ì¥Rº¡¦óµ¥ªº³ß¼Ö¡A¦]¬°§Ú©Ò¬Ý¨£©M©ÒÅ¥¨£ªº¡Aªºªº½T½TÅý§Ú·Pı¦b¥H¥±©Ò¡B©«¼»Ã¹¥§{¡B©Î¨ä¥L¨Ï®{®É¥Nªº±Ð·|¤¤¡C§Ú¿Ë¦ÕÅ¥¨£¡A¤]¿Ë²´¬Ý¨£¦Û¤v¦b·s¬ù®Ñ«H¤¤©ÒŪ¨ìªº¤@¤Á¡K¡v¡C1579¦Ü1593¦~¶¡¡A¥ḺN¸t¸gͬ°±¶§J¤å¡A³oÓª©¥»¦¨¤F¤µ¤Ñ±¶§J¤å¸t¸gªºÂÅ¥»¡A¤]¬O±¶§J²{¥N¤å¾Çªº°ò¦¡C
        ¦X¤@§Ì¥S·|¤¤ªº¶Q±Ú¡A¬°¤FÁ×§K§Ì¥S·|ÀH®É¨ü¨ì¹G¢¡A¤@¤ß·Qn±N¨ä¥ß¬°ªi§Æ¦Ì¨È°ê±Ð¡C1609¦~¡A¦b¶Q±Úªºn¯Ù¤U¡Aªi§Æ¦Ì¨È°ê¤ýñ¸p¤F©v±Ð¦Û¥Ñªº¾Ë³¹¡A¬F©²¦¨¥ß¡uºûÅ@©v±Ð©eû·|¡v¡At³d°õ¦æ«OÅ@·s±Ðªº«H¥õÁn©ú¡Cº¸«áµÌ¼w¯Pµn¤Wªi§Æ¦Ì¨È¬Ó¦ì¡A»PC¿q·|©M«H©^¤Ñ¥D±Ðªº¤j¦ÚÁp¤â¡A¼o¤î«H¥õ¦Û¥Ñªº«O»Ù¡C¨â¤è½Ä¬ð¶Vºt¶V¯P¡A²×©ó©ó1620¦~¡A¦b¥¬©Ô®æ«°¥~®i¶}¤F¡u¥Õ¤s¤§¾Ô¡v¡C¤Ñ¥D±Ð¤j³Ó¡A27¦W«OÅ@·s±Ðªº¶Q±Ú³Q±Ùº¡A°ê¤º²£¥Í¼É°Ê¡A³\¦h¤HÄâ¦Ñ§ß¥®Â÷¶}¤Fªi§Æ¦Ì¨È»P¼¯º¸ºû¨È¡A¤H¼Æ¦h¹F¤T¸U¤»¤dªº®a®x¡C¾ãÓ¤Q¤C¥@¬ö¡Aªø¹F¤@¦Ê¦~¤§¤[¡A¦X¤@§Ì¥S·|ªº«H®{³£¥u¯à¦b·t¤¤·q«ô¯«¡A¦¨¤F¡uÁôÂ꺺ؤl¡v¡C§Ì¥S·|³Ì«á¤@¦ì»â¾É¤H±dªù¯Ã¡]John 
        Amos Comenius¡^´¿¼g¨ì¡G¡u¸g¾ú§i¶D§ÚÌ¡A¦³ªº®ÉÔ¡A¯«Åý¬Y¨Ç±Ð·|³Q·´Ãa¡A¦ý«o·|¿³°_§Oªº±Ð·|¡A©Î¨Ï¥L̦b§O³B«·s¿³°_¡C¯«n¨Ï¤@ӱз|¦bì¦a´_¬¡¡B¦º¥h¡BÁÙ¬O¦b§O³B´_¿³¡A§Ų́䣪¾¹D¡C¡K¥lµÛ¯«¦Û¤vªºÀ³³\¡AºÖµÁ`¬On³Q¨º¨Ç¨ü¹L¯«¥¿·íºÞ±Ðªº°ò·þ®{¡A¶Çµ¹¦a¤W¨ä¥Lªº¤H¥Á¡C¦]¦¹¡K§Ú̪º·l¥¢¡An¦¨¬°¥@¤Hªº¯¬ºÖ¡C¡v¥t¤@¦ì³ìªvC´µ§J¡]George 
        Jaeschke¡^¤]»¡¹LÃþ¦üªº¸Ü¡G¡u¦n¹³²{¦b§Ì¥S̪º±Ð·|¤w¸g¨ì¤FºÉÀY¡A¦ý¬O¿Ë·Rªº«Ä¤l¡A§A̱Nn¬Ý¨£¤@Ó¤jªº¬@±Ï¡A¬O¤@¤Á¿ò¯d¤U¨Ó¤§¤Hªº¥÷¡C§Ú¤£ª¾¹D³oÓ¬@±Ï·|Á{¤Î¼¯º¸ºû¨È¥»¤g¡AÁÙ¬O§A̱oÂ÷¶}³oÓ¤Ú¤ñÛ¤§¦a¡FµL½×¦p¦ó¡A§Ú²`«H³oÓ¬@±Ï´Nn¹ê²{¡C¡K¦³¤@ÓÁ×Ãøªº¦a¤è¬°§A̹w³Æ¡A¦b¨º¸Ì¡A§A̯à°÷¨S¦³ÄߩȪº¡A·ÓµÛ¥Dªº¸t¨¥¨Æ©^Í¢¡C¡vC§J´µªº¨à¤l»P®]¤l¡A´N¬O²Ä¤@§å±aµÛ©d¤l¨à¤l¡A½ñ¤W·s¥ÍÅM¤Ò²ø¶éªº¼¯º¸ºû¨È«H®{¡C
        2. ¬ù¿«±dªù¯Ã¡]John Amos Comenius¡A1592-1670¡^¥Í¥Â²z
        ±dªù¯Ã©ó1592¦~¡A¥X¥Í©ó¼¯º¸ºû¨Èªº¥§¥¬¥§¯÷¡]Nivnitz¡^¡C¥Lªº¤÷¿Ë°¨¤B±dªù¯Ã¬O¤@¦ì·q°@ªº¦X¤@§Ì¥S·|«H®{¡A¤l¤k°£¤F±dªù¯Ã¥~¡AÁÙ¦³¨âÓ¤k¨à¡C±dªù¯Ã¤Q·³¨º¦~¡A¤÷¿Ë¥h¥@¡F¤§«áªº¨â¦~¤º¡A¥À¿Ë©M¨âÓ©n©f¤]¬ÛÄ~¥h¥@¡AµL¨ÌµL¾aªº±dªù¯Ã§ë¾a¥v»A´µ¥§¯÷¡]Strassnitz¡^ªº§B¥À¡A¦b¨º¸Ì±µ¨ü¤Fªì¨Bªº¾Ç®Õ±Ð¨|¡C1608¦~¡A±dªù¯Ã¶i¤J¼¯º¸ºû¨È§Ì¥S·|©Ò¿ìªº´¶¹p³Ò¡]Prerau¡^©Ô¤B¾Ç®Õ¡A¥¿¦¡±µ¨ü¤¤µ¥±Ð¨|¡C¨â¦~¤§«á¡A¶i¤J¼w°ê¯Ç¶ë¡]Nassau¡^ªº¶Âº¸¥»¡]Herborn¡^¤j¾Ç´NŪ¡C
        1618¦~¶}©l¡A±dªù¯Ã¦b´I¥§§J¡]Fulneck¡^ªª¾i¦X¤@§Ì¥S·|¡C1620¦~¥Õ¤s¤§¾ÔÃzµo¡A¤Ñ¥D±Ð¤j³Ó¡A¦è¯Z¤úx¶¤¶i¤J´I¥§§J¡A¥L¥u¦n°kÃø¨ìÁ§°Ç©«¬dº¸¤h¡]Charles 
        of Zerotin¡^ªº«°³ùÁ×Ãø¡A¦¨¤F·í¦a§Ì¥S̪º»â³S¡C¥L¦b¥j³ù¤¤¼g¤F¤@¥»¦W¬°¡u¥@¬É°g®c»P¤ßÆF¼Ö¶é¡vªº®Ñ¡A©Ê½èÃþ¦ü¡u¤Ñ¸ô¾úµ{¡v¡A¥H´J¨¥ªº¤è¦¡³¯z¤H¦b¥@¤W§ä¤£¨ì¥¦w¡A°ß¦³¤º¦íªº°ò·þ¡A¤~¬O¤H¯u¥¿ªº¥¦w¡C«á¨Ó¡A±dªù¯Ã³Q¢¦A«×°kÃø¡A¥L±aµÛ³Ì«á¤@§å¼¯º¸ºû¨È«H®{¡AÂ÷¶}¥»¦a¡C³~¤¤¦]°§¾j©M½E¬Ì¡A±dªù¯Ãªº©d¨à¬ÛÄ~¥h¥@¡A¦ý¥L¤´¿EÀy«H®{¡A¯«¥²·|¬°¥L̯d¤@¨Ç¡uÁôÂ꺺ؤl¡v¡C¼¯º¸ºû¨Èªº«H®{°k¨ì¤FªiÄõªº¨½ÂÄ¡]Lissa¡^´Ï¨¡A±dªù¯Ã¦b·í¦aªº¾Ç®Õ¥ô¾¡C1650¦~¡A±dªù¯Ã¼g¤U¤F¡uÁ{¦M¥À¿Ëªº¨£ÃÒ¡v¡A®Ñ¤¤»¡¨ì¡A¨ºÃh¨|«H®{ªº¥À¿Ë¢w±Ð·|¡A¤w¸g¦¨¤F³Ü¾K¨à¤k¤§¦åªºÅ]°¡A²³©n©f¢wºÖµ¬£±Ð·|À³®¬§ï¡AÂ÷¶}¨ºÁ¶Âp¯«ªº¤Ú¤ñÛºÙ¡C¥L¤]©IÆ~¤@¤Á¸Û¹ê©I¨D¥D¦Wªº¤H¡A¦b¯u²z¤¤©¼¦¹³sµ²¡A¦X¦Ó¬°¤@¡F¦^¨ì¸t¸g¤¤³Ì°ò¥»©M³Ì«nªº¯u²z®Ú°ò¤W¡A°kÁרS¦³ª¾ÃѪº¼ö¤ß¡A¨ÃÂǵۥæ³q¡A±oµÛ¯«ªº¼¦¼§¡AC¿qªºÄ_¶Q¡A¥H¤Î¸tÆFªº®¦½ç¡C¡vº¸«áªiÄõ¾D¹J¹G¢¡A±dªù¯Ã¤S±aµÛ«H®{°k©¹²üÄõ¡A¨Ã©ó1670¦~³u©ó²üÄõ¡C 
        ¡@
        HISTORY 
        OF THE ANCIENT UNITAS FRATRUM (1457-1722)
        ¡]¥»¤åºK¦Ûhttp://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02616a.htm¡^
        The Bohemian Brethren are a link in a chain 
        of sects beginning with Wyclif (1324-84) and coming down to the present 
        day. The ideas of the Englishman found favour with Hus, and Bohemia 
        proved a better soil for their growth than England. Both Wyclif and Hus 
        were moved by a sincere desire to reform the Church of their times; both 
        failed and, without intending it, became the fathers of new heretical 
        bodies - the Lollards and the Hussites. The former were persecuted out 
        of existence in England by Catholic rulers; the latter prospered in 
        Bohemia, thanks to royal and national support. The burning of John Hus 
        at the stake for his stubborn adherence to the condemed doctrines of 
        Wyclif (at Constance, 6 July, 1415) was considered an insult to the 
        faith of the Bohemian nation, which, since its first conversion to 
        Christianity, had never swerved from the truth. The University of Prague 
        came boldly forward to vindicate the man and his doctrines; the party 
        which hitherto had worked at reforming the Church from within now 
        rejected the Church's authority and became the Hussite sect. Divisions 
        at once arose amongst its members. Some completely set aside the 
        authority of the Church and admitted no other rule than the Bible; 
        others only demanded Communion under both kinds for the laity and free 
        preaching of the Gospel, with some minor reforms. The former, who met 
        for worship at "Mount Tabor", were called Taborites; the 
        latter received the name of Calixtines, i.e., the party of the Chalice. 
        As long as they had a common enemy to fight they fought together under 
        the leadership of that extraordinary man, John Trocznowski, known as 
        Zizka (the one-eyed), and for fully fifteen years proved more than a 
        match for the imperial armies and papal crusaders sent to crush them. 
        Peace was at length obtained, not by force of arms, but by skilful 
        negotiations which resulted in the "Compactata of Basle" (30 
        November, 1433). The compact was chiefly due to the concessions made by 
        the Calixtine party; it found little or no favour with the Taborites. 
        The discontent led to a feud which terminated at the Battle of Lippau 
        (30 May, 1434) with the death of Procopius, the Taborite leader, and the 
        almost total extinction of this party. The small remnant, too 
        insignificant to play a role in politics, withdrew into private life, 
        devoting all their energies to religion. In 1457 one section formed 
        itself into a separate body under the name of the "Brethren's 
        Union" (Unitas Fratrum), which is now generally spoken of as the 
        Bohemian Brethren. Their contemporaries coined for them several 
        opprobrious designations, such as Jamnici (cave-dwellers) and Pivnicnici 
        (beerhouse men), Bunzlau Brethren, Picards (corrupted to Pickarts), etc. 
        The originator of the new sect was a 
        certain Gregory, a nephew of the leading Calixtine preacher, Rokyzana, 
        whose mind was imbued with the conviction that the Roman Church was 
        helplessly and hopelessly corrupt. Gregory therefore decided to found a 
        new Church in accordance with his uncle's and his own ideas of what a 
        perfect Church should be. Through Rokyzana's influence he obtained leave 
        from the governor George von Podiebrad to organize a community in the 
        village of Kunwald near Senftenberg. Michel, the parish priest of 
        Senftenberg, and Matthias, a farmer of Kunwald, joined Gregory, and soon 
        the community counted several thousand members. Their distinguishing 
        tenets at this early period were rather vague: abolition of all 
        distinctions of rank and fortune, the name of Christian being the one 
        all-sufficient dignity; abolition of oaths, of military service, etc. 
        Governor von Podiebrad kept a vigilant eye on the growing community. In 
        1461 he had Gregory and several other persons arrested on suspicion of 
        reviving the heresies of the Taborites. The accused admitted that they 
        did not believe in the real presence of Christ in the Holy Eucharist, 
        but had partaken of the bread and wine at their nocturnal meetings as 
        common food. They were set free, but, to avoid further interference, 
        Gregory and his companions fled into the Lordship of Reichenau, where 
        they lived hidden in the mountains. There, in 1464, was held a secret 
        assembly consisting of Brethren from Bohemia and Moravia, who accepted 
        as basis of their creed the doctrine that justification is obtained 
        through faith and charity and confers the hope of eternal salvation. The 
        rich were requested to abandon their wealth and worldly pomp and to live 
        in voluntary poverty. The Brethren were to give up private property for 
        the benefit of the Brotherhood. Anyone not observing the brotherhood of 
        faith and practice was to be separated from the community. 
        Meanwhile the persecution continued. The 
        Utraquist (Calixtine) priests refused the Sacrament to the Brethren. 
        These, therefore, were forced to constitute a priesthood of their own 
        belief. A bishop and a number of priests were chosen by lot, and the 
        separation from the Utraquists became an accomplished fact. The head of 
        the Austrian Waldenses, who was believed to have received consecration 
        from a real bishop, gave episcopal orders to the ex-parish priest, 
        Michael, and Michael consecrated his friend, Matthias, bishop and 
        ordained several priests. The new Bishop Matthias of Kunwald then 
        reordained his consecrator, to make him a true priest of the 
        Brotherhood. This happened in 1467 at the synod of Lhotka, near 
        Reichenau, where also all those present were rebaptized. The breach with 
        both Catholics and Utraquists was now completed, and the Brethren began 
        to order their community on the model of "the primitive 
        Church". The governing power centred in a council presided over by 
        a judge. Four seniors, or elders, held the episcopal power. The priests 
        had no property and were encouraged to celibacy. The strictest morality 
        and modesty were exacted from the faithful. All acts subservient to 
        luxury were forbidden; oaths and military service were only permitted in 
        very exceptional cases. Public sins had to be publicly confessed, and 
        were punished with ecclesiastical penalties or expulsion. A committee of 
        women watched with relentless severity over the behaviour of their 
        sisters. 
        A new persecution quickly followed on the 
        synod of Lhotka. The Brethren defended their cause in copious writings, 
        but in 1468 many of them were imprisoned and tortured, one was burnt at 
        the stake. The death of the governor George von Podiebrad in 1471 
        brought some relief. Brother Gregory died in 1473. From 1480 Lucas of 
        Prague was the leading man. Thanks to him, and to toleration granted the 
        Brethren by King Ladislaus II, the Brotherhood rapidly increased in 
        numbers. By the end of the fifteenth century there were 400 communities. 
        Pope Alexander VI's endeavour to reconvert the Brethren (in 1499) proved 
        futile. About this time an internal feud in the "Unity of 
        Brethren" led to a renewal of persecution. The Amosites, so called 
        from their leader, Brother Amos, accused their more moderate Brethren of 
        fomenting violent opposition to the Government in imitation of their 
        spiritual ancestors, the Taborites. King Ladislaus II thereupon issued a 
        decree prohibiting the meetings of the Brethren under heavy penalties. 
        In many places, however, the decree was left unheeded, and powerful 
        landowners continued to protect the Brotherhood. Once more the king 
        resorted to milder measures. In 1507 he invited the chiefs of the 
        Brethren to meet the Utraquists in conference at Prague. The Brethren 
        sent a few rude, unlettered fellows unable to give answer to the 
        questions of the professors. The king regarded this as an insult and 
        ordered all the meetings of the "Pickarts" to be suppressed, 
        all their books to be burnt, and the recalcitrants to be imprisoned 
        (1508). 
        The Brethren now began to look for foreign 
        sympathy. Erasmus complimented them on their knowledge of truth, but 
        refused to commit himself further. Luther objected to their doctrine on 
        the Eucharist, to the celibacy of their clergy, to the practice of 
        rebaptizing, and to the belief in seven sacraments. Brother Lucas 
        answered in a sharp pamphlet and, having ascertained the low standard of 
        church discipline among the Lutherans of Wittenberg, ceased all attempts 
        at union. At the same time (1525) Lucas rejected the Zwinglian doctrines 
        which some Brethren were trying to introduce. After the death of Lucas 
        (1528) the government of the Brotherhood passed into the hands of men 
        fond of innovations, among whom John Augusta is the most remarkable. 
        Augusta reopened negotiations with Luther and so modified his creed that 
        it gained the Reformer's approbation, but the union of the two sects was 
        again prevented by the less rigid morals of the Lutherans in Bohemia and 
        Moravia. Augusta pleaded for stricter church discipline, but Luther 
        dismissed him, saying: "Be you the apostle of the Bohemians, I will 
        be the apostle of the Germans. Do as circumstances direct, we will do 
        the same here" (1542). Soon afterwards the Bohemian Estates were 
        requested to join Charles V in his war against the Smalkaldic league. 
        Catholics and old Utraquists obeyed, but the Bohemian Protestants, 
        having met in the house of Brother Kostka, established a kind of 
        provisional government composed of eight members, four of whom belonged 
        to the Brotherhood, and appointed a general to lead the armed rebels 
        into Saxony against the emperor. Charles's victory over the Smalkaldians 
        at Muhlberg (1547) left the rebels no choice but to submit to their 
        king, Ferdinand I. The Brethren, who had been the chief instigators of 
        the rebellion, were now doomed to extinction. John Augusta and his 
        associate, Jacob Bilek, were cast into prison; the Brethren's meetings 
        were interdicted throughout the whole kingdom; those who refused to 
        submit were exiled. Many took refuge in Poland and Prussia (1578); those 
        who remained in the country joined, at least pro forma, the Utraquist 
        party. Owing to Maximilian II's leniency and Protestant propensities, 
        the Bohemian diet of 1575 could draw up the "Bohemian Confession of 
        Faith" in which the principles of the Brethren find expression 
        along with those of the Lutherans. Under Rudolph II (1584) persecution 
        was again resorted to, and lasted with more or less intensity down to 
        1609, when Rudolph's Charter granted the free exercise of their religion 
        to all Protestants. No sooner, however, did external oppression relent 
        than internal dissension broke out in the Protestant ranks. The 
        Consistory, composed of Lutherans and Brethren, was unable to maintain 
        peace and union between the two parties. Ferdinand II, after his victory 
        over the rebellious Bohemians at the white Mountain near Prague (1620), 
        offered them the choice between Catholicism and exile. Many Brethren 
        emigrated to Hungary, but a greater number to northern Poland, where 
        they settled in Lissa (now in Prussian Posen). Even to this day there 
        are in that district seven communities calling themselves Brethren, 
        although their confession of faith is the Helvetic. In Prussian Silesia 
        there are also three communities of Brethren claiming descent from the 
        Bohemian Brotherhood. 
        ¡@
        ¬ù¿«±dªù¯Ã¤p¶Ç
        ¡]¥»¤åÂà¸ü¦Ûhttp://www.nioerar.edu.tw/basis1/693/a37.htm¡^
        
        ªL¨Óµo
        ±dªù¯Ã(¼w¤å¬°Johann Amos Comenius¨ä¯ª°êªº±¶§J¤å¬°Jan 
        Amos Komensky)©ó¦è¤¸¤@¤¤E¤G¦~¤T¤ë¤G¤Q¤K¤é¡A¥X¥Í©ó²{¦b±¶§J¼¯©Ô¤ñ¨È(Moravia)ªF³¡®¦®æ¨½¦è¡D´¶Ã¹¼w(Ungarish-Brod)ªºªñ¥¥§¥¬¥§¯÷(Nivnitz)¡C³o¤@¦~¥¿¬O¦è¼Úªñ¥@¬ì¾Ç®a¦÷§Q²¤(Galileo 
        Galilei 1564-1642)µo©ú·Å«×pªº¤@¦~¡A¥ç¬O³QºÙ¬°ªñ¥@õ¾Ç¤§¤÷ªº²Ã¥dº¸(Rene 
        Descartes 1596-1650)½Ï¥Íªº«e¥|¦~¡C
        ±dªù¯Ãªº¤÷¿Ë°¨¤B¡D±dªù¯Ã¡]Martin 
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