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Motus Unitarianus, quamquam Unitarianus primum non appellatus, paene simul coepit in [[Polonia]]-[[Lithuania]] et [[Transylvania]]<!--melius nexus (sed ruber): Principality of Transylvania (1570–1711--> medio [[saeculum 16|saeculo sexto decimo]], inter cuius assectatores fuerunt aliqui [[Italia|Italici]].<ref>James Hastings, ''Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics: Algonquins-Art,'' 785–2001: "The first Unitarians were Italians, and the majority took refuge in Poland, where the laxity of the laws and the independence of the nobility secured for them a toleration which would have been denied to their views in other countries."</ref><ref>Hans Joachim Hillerbrand, ed., ''The Encyclopedia of Protestantism'': "The so-called Golden Age of Unitarianism in Transylvania (1540–1571) resulted in a rich production of works both in Hungarian and Latin" (2004).</ref> In [[Anglia]], prima ecclesia unitariana anno [[1774]] in Via Essex Londinii constituta est, ubi praesidium [[Britannia|Britannicum]] hodiernum iam patet.<ref>Erwin Fahlbusch, ''The Encyclopedia of Christianity'' (2008), vol. 5, p. 603: "Lindsey attempted but failed to gain legal relief for Anglican Unitarians, so in 1774 he opened his own distinctly Unitarian church on Essex Street, London, where today's British Unitarian headquarters are still located."</ref> Prima sollemnis [[fides|fidei]] Unitarianae acceptio per omnem congregationem in [[America]] in [[Cappella Regis]] [[Bostonia]]e facta est, unde [[Iacobus Freeman (clericus)|Iacobus Freeman]] doctrinam unitarianam anno [[1784]] docere coepit, et, rector rite creatus, Librum Precum secundum doctrinas Unitarianas anno [[1786]] retractavit.<ref>''American Unitarianism: or, A Brief history of "The progress and State of the Unitarian Churches in America,'' third edition, 1815 "So early as the year 1786, Dr. Freeman had persuaded his church to adopt a liturgy, which the Rev. . . . Thus much for the history of Unitarianism at the Stone Chapel. "</ref><!--MULTO PLUS IN EN:-->
 
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== Vide etiam ==
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*[[Arianismus]]