Trubar’s work was not fiction because his time was not a time of
fiction-writing, but rather a time of non-fiction; nevertheless, his
writings have literary qualities too. In his writings, especially the
Catechisms, with the two explications from 1575, we often find the
topics of children, women, family, and love. He also mentioned the
notion of play and toys. These are proof of his new era conception of
the child, woman, family and love. His literary heritage started in the
16th century and took its course simultaneously with the European period
of Humanism, the Renaissance, and the European Reformation.
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