@article{Nijman:299267,
      recid = {299267},
      author = {Nijman, Janne Elisabeth},
      title = {Ius gentium et naturae the human conscience and early  modern international law},
      address = {2021},
      number = {ARTICLE},
      abstract = {What to focus on in an intellectual history of 'ius  gentium et naturae' for a volume on the relations between  international law and Christianities? For centuries,  (international) law and Christian theology maintained  intensive and complex relations, which it is impossible to  do justice to within the scope of this chapter. With the  more recent “turn to history” in international legal  scholarship, discussions of the relationship between 'ius  gentium et naturae' and Christianity generally center on  secularization and/or empire. For obvious reasons both sets  of histories deal with early modernity – the time that the  so-called 'Respublica Christiana' or Holy Roman Empire was  profoundly affected by Reformations, gradually fragmented,  and religious and theological fights were part of the  politics of the newly emerging European nation-states.},
      url = {http://repository.graduateinstitute.ch/record/299267},
      doi = {https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108565646.008},
}