HANSERD KNOLLYS AND THE POLISH BRETHREN
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If you’ve ever heard a too-neat story about how immersion “obviously” arrived among English Baptists, this booklet is a welcome corrective. It treats the “Polish Brethren” label with the caution it deserves, traces the plausible relay through the Dutch world (including the Rijnsburg Collegiants), and handles the Kiffin/Jessey–Richard Blunt “Holland mission” tradition without turning it into a fairy tale. Best of all, it puts Hanserd Knollys where the timeline actually places him: significant downstream, not magically upstream. Clear, skeptical, and genuinely useful for anyone who cares about truth more than tribal mythology.
Amazon Kindle review (review-ready)
Title: Honest history, not a tidy legend
This is a short work with a rare virtue: it refuses to lie for a good story. It explores the often-invoked connection between Hanserd Knollys and the “Polish Brethren” with careful attention to what the sources can actually bear, and it repeatedly distinguishes plausible transmission from documentary certainty.
The strongest parts are its handling of labels and networks. “Polish Brethren” is treated as a slippery term (sometimes narrow, sometimes a catch-all), and Poland–Lithuania is framed realistically as an “idea-reservoir” rather than a simplistic origin factory. The discussion of the Dutch interchange (including the Collegiants) and the Blunt-to-Holland episode in the Kiffin/Jessey record tradition is balanced: the narrative shape is presented, the fog is acknowledged, and later genealogical smoothing is called out.
If you want a responsible, readable guide to a complicated early-modern relay—without triumphalism, without sneering—this is worth your time.