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steido01
Guest
“Papist,” “Romish,” “Roman,” etc. were all qualifiers (and, often, slurs) meant to contradistinguish between those in communion with Rome and those not. The modifier “Roman” Catholic was certainly used well before the 19th century (since the beginning of the Reformation - early 1500’s). You’re probably right about Anglicans likely being the first to use that precise term in English, since Luther usually spoke German.I was under the impression that the Reformers, in response to being called Calvinists, Lutherans, etc. called Catholics “Papists”, and the modifier “Roman” was added on in the 19th century by Anglicans. Have I been mistaken?
CAF provides the following bit of (only-slightly-biased and victimized) history: catholic.com/quickquestions/when-did-the-term-roman-catholic-church-first-come-into-being