Adriaan Koerbagh and his younger brother Johannes (1634–1672) were sons of a ceramics maker, who died young leaving them funds allowing them to pursue extended schooling. Adriaan studied at the universities of respectively
Utrecht,
Franeker and
Leiden, becoming a doctor in medicine in 1659 and master in
jurisprudence in 1661. He was one of the most radical figures of the
Age of Enlightenment, rejecting and reviling the church and state as unreliable institutions and exposing theologians' and lawyers' language as vague and opaque tools to blind the people in order to maintain their own power. Koerbagh put the authority of reason above that of dogmas and was thus seen as a true
freethinker, although twentieth century notions of him as an
anarchist or
libertarian cannot be applied with certainty. Koerbagh described the Bible and dogmas like the
Trinity and the divine nature of Christ as only the work of men. Also, like his contemporary
Baruch de Spinoza, he argued that
God is identical with nature and that nothing exists outside of nature. Therefore, he argued,
natural science, not
theology, was the real theology of the world. In his views about the
secularization of the Republic of the Netherlands and the limitation of ecclesiastical powers, he argued that religion is irrational and only maintains its position through deception and violence. He wrote in books
t Nieuw Woorden-Boeck der Regten (
The New Dictionary of Rights, 1664), and in
Een Bloemhof van allerley lieflijkheyd (
A Flower Garden of All Sorts of Delights, 1668), under the pseudonym Vreederijk Waarmond. This book explained various technical terms and foreign words. The Church authorities were offended by the dictionary's articles on religious and political topics, forcing Koerbagh to flee to
Culemborg, a legally autonomous town in another province that would not extradite him, and then to
Leiden. Adriaan Koerbagh fiercely opposed the
Dutch Reformed Church in his third work, "Een Ligt schynende in duystere plaatsen, om te verligten de voornaamste saaken der Godsgeleerdtheyd en Godsdienst" (A Light Shining In Dark Places, To Shed Light On Matters Of Theology and Religion). He went to Leiden, where he was betrayed by his printer, who knew the contents of his work, and arrested by the authorities. His brother Johannes was also arrested. In 1668, he was found guilty of
blasphemy and was sentenced to 10 years in the
Rasphuis jail at Amsterdam, where he had to do forced labour, followed by exile and a 4000
guilder fine. He died a few months later in 1669 in the Rasphuis due to the pressures of prison life. His publications were largely destroyed by the authorities of the Republic. His brother Johannes was released because of lack of evidence against him, but he never published again. He died three years later, in 1672. ==Works==