RT Article T1 A Conversion Too Far: Elisabeth von Loe, Moritz von Büren, and the Jesuits JF Church history and religious culture VO 98 IS 3/4 SP 387 OP 406 A1 Ellis-Marino, Elizabeth LA English PB Brill YR 2018 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/168356460X AB The last Calvinist Baron of Büren died suddenly in 1610, after years of struggle with the Catholic Prince-Bishop of Paderborn. His widow Elisabeth converted to Catholicism, along with her four year old son Moritz. During her lifetime, the small territory her son controlled remained a relatively safe place for Protestants. Moritz, on the other hand, made a vow as a teenager to join the Jesuit order. After years of resisting his mother's attempt to arrange a marriage for him, while enjoying a stellar career as a Jurist in the Reichskammergericht, Moritz fulfilled this vow after his mother's death. The end of his life saw him involved in three separate lawsuits in an attempt to remove his family members from his ancestral lands and replace them with a community of Jesuits, to whom he had deeded his family's property. The estate and town of Büren were entirely Catholic within fifteen years of the community's establishment. This paper explores the difference between Elisabeth's measured strategy of conversion and Moritz's counter-Reformation inspired zeal. K1 Holy Roman Empire K1 Jesuits K1 Conversion DO 10.1163/18712428-09803024