1782 Edict of Tolerance
The 1782 Edict of Tolerance was a religious reform of Joseph II, [Holy Roman Emperor|Joseph II] while he was emperor of the Habsburg monarchy as part of his policy of Josephinism, a series of drastic reforms to remodel Austria in the form of the ideal Enlightened state. Joseph II's enlightened despotism included the Patent of Toleration, enacted in 1781, and the Edict of Tolerance in 1782. The Patent of Toleration granted religious freedom to the Lutherans, Calvinists, and Serbian Orthodox, but it was not until the 1782 Edict of Tolerance that Joseph II extended religious freedom to the Jewish population.
Image:Vysoka-tolerancni kostel.JPG|thumb|Tolerance church in Vysoká – without entrance from the street and without tower
1781 Patent of Toleration
The 1781 Patent of Toleration allowed certain rights and recognized the existence of non-Catholic religions in the Habsburg monarchy. The Edict of Toleration allowed Protestants from other countries without religious tolerance to immigrate to Austria and hold jobs such as pharmacists, carpenters and blacksmiths. The tolerated religions, however, were allowed to have congregations no larger than 100 people in a private home. If a had more than 100 families living in an area, they were allowed to build a church only if it had no direct entrance from the street or visible appearance of being a church. When it came to the case of mixed marriages, there were also laws that had to be followed. If a Catholic man had children with a non-Catholic woman, all children would be raised Catholic. In the case of a Catholic woman with a non-Catholic man, the girls would be raised Catholic, and the boys would be raised non-Catholic.Scrutiny from Catholic officials occurred in places like Bohemia, where the officials attempted to preserve religious unity. They had printed out all pamphlets that described this edict in German. The population that would be affected, however, generally could not speak or read German.
Serbian Metropolitan Mojsije Putnik translated and published the tolerance patent in Serbian. That meant that there were equal rights for members of the Serbian Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church in Sremski Karlovci.