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Reformation

The Reformation (alternatively named the Protestant Reformation or the European Reformation)[1] was a major movement within Western Christianity in 16th-century Europe that posed a religious and political challenge to the Catholic Church and in particular to papal authority, arising from what were perceived to be errors, abuses, and discrepancies by the Catholic Church. The Reformation was the start of Protestantism and the split of the Western Church into Protestantism and what is now the Roman Catholic Church. It is also considered to be one of the events that signified the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the early modern period in Europe.[2]

Martin Luther, pioneer of the Reformation and Lutheran Church

Prior to Martin Luther, there were numerous earlier reform movements. Although the Reformation is usually considered to have started with the publication of the Ninety-five Theses by Martin Luther in 1517, he was not excommunicated by Pope Leo X until January 1521. The Diet of Worms of May 1521 condemned Luther and officially banned citizens of the Holy Roman Empire from defending or propagating his ideas.[3] The spread of Gutenberg's printing press provided the means for the rapid dissemination of religious materials in the vernacular. Luther survived after being declared an outlaw due to the protection of Elector Frederick the Wise. The initial movement in Germany diversified, and other reformers such as Huldrych Zwingli and John Calvin arose. In general, the Reformers argued that salvation in Christianity was a completed status based on faith in Jesus alone and not a process that requires good works, as in the Catholic view. Key events of the period include: Diet of Worms (1521), formation of the Lutheran Duchy of Prussia (1525), English Reformation (1529 onwards), the Council of Trent (1545–63), the Peace of Augsburg (1555), the excommunication of Elizabeth I (1570), Edict of Nantes (1598) and Peace of Westphalia (1648). The Counter-Reformation, also called the Catholic Reformation or the Catholic Revival, was the period of Catholic reforms initiated in response to the Protestant Reformation.[4] The end of the Reformation era is disputed among modern scholars.

Overview

Movements had been made towards a Reformation prior to Martin Luther, so some Protestants, such as Landmark Baptists, and the tradition of the Radical Reformation prefer to credit the start of the Reformation to reformers such as Arnold of Brescia, Peter Waldo, John Wycliffe, Jan Hus, Petr Chelčický, and Girolamo Savonarola.[a] Due to the reform efforts of Hus and other Bohemian reformers, Utraquist Hussitism was acknowledged by the Council of Basel and was officially tolerated in the Crown of Bohemia, although other movements were still subject to persecution, including the Lollards in England and the Waldensians in France and Italian regions.[citation needed]

Luther began by criticising the sale of indulgences, insisting that the Pope had no authority over purgatory and that the Treasury of Merit had no foundation in the Bible. The Reformation developed further to include a distinction between Law and Gospel, a complete reliance on Scripture as the only source of proper doctrine (sola scriptura) and the belief that faith in Jesus is the only way to receive God's pardon for sin (sola fide) rather than good works. Although this is generally considered a Protestant belief, a similar formulation was taught by Molinist and Jansenist Catholics. The priesthood of all believers downplayed the need for saints or priests to serve as mediators, and mandatory clerical celibacy was ended. Simul justus et peccator implied that although people could improve, no one could become good enough to earn forgiveness from God. Sacramental theology was simplified and attempts at imposing Aristotelian epistemology were resisted.[citation needed]

Luther and his followers did not see these theological developments as changes. The 1530 Augsburg Confession concluded that "in doctrine and ceremonies nothing has been received on our part against Scripture or the Church Catholic", and even after the Council of Trent, Martin Chemnitz published the 1565–73 Examination of the Council of Trent[5] as an attempt to prove that Trent innovated on doctrine while the Lutherans were following in the footsteps of the Church Fathers and Apostles.[6][7]

The initial movement in Germany diversified, and other reformers arose independently of Luther such as Zwingli in Zürich and John Calvin in Geneva. Depending on the country, the Reformation had varying causes and different backgrounds and also unfolded differently than in Germany. The spread of Gutenberg's printing press provided the means for the rapid dissemination of religious materials in the vernacular.

During Reformation-era confessionalization, Western Christianity adopted different confessions (Catholic, Lutheran, Reformed, Anglican, Anabaptist, Unitarian, etc.).[8] Radical Reformers, besides forming communities outside state sanction, sometimes employed more extreme doctrinal change, such as the rejection of the tenets of the councils of Nicaea and Chalcedon with the Unitarians of Transylvania. Anabaptist movements were especially persecuted following the German Peasants' War.

Leaders within the Roman Catholic Church responded with the Counter-Reformation, initiated by the Confutatio Augustana in 1530, the Council of Trent in 1545, the formation of the Jesuits in 1540, the Defensio Tridentinæ fidei in 1578, and also a series of wars and expulsions of Protestants that continued until the 19th century. Northern Europe, with the exception of most of Ireland, came under the influence of Protestantism. Southern Europe remained predominantly Catholic apart from the much-persecuted Waldensians. Central Europe was the site of much of the Thirty Years' War and there were continued expulsions of Protestants in Central Europe up to the 19th century. Following World War II, the removal of ethnic Germans to either East Germany or Siberia reduced Protestantism in the Warsaw Pact countries, although some remain today.[citation needed]

The absence of Protestants, however, does not necessarily imply a failure of the Reformation. Although Protestants were excommunicated and ended up worshipping in communions separate from Catholics (contrary to the original intention of the Reformers), they were also suppressed and persecuted in most of Europe at one point. As a result, some of them lived as crypto-Protestants, also called Nicodemites, contrary to the urging of John Calvin, who wanted them to live their faith openly.[9] Some crypto-Protestants have been identified as late as the 19th century after immigrating to Latin America.[10]

History

Origins and early history

Earlier reform movements

 
 
Execution of Jan Hus in Konstanz (1415). Western Christianity was already formally compromised in the Lands of the Bohemian Crown long before Luther with the Basel Compacts (1436) and the Religious peace of Kutná Hora (1485). Utraquist Hussitism was allowed there alongside the Roman Catholic confession. By the time the Reformation arrived, the Kingdom of Bohemia and the Margraviate of Moravia both had majority Hussite populations for decades now.

John Wycliffe questioned the privileged status of the clergy which had bolstered their powerful role in England and the luxury and pomp of local parishes and their ceremonies.[11] He was accordingly characterised as the "evening star" of scholasticism and as the morning star or stella matutina of the English Reformation.[12] In 1374, Catherine of Siena began travelling with her followers throughout northern and central Italy advocating reform of the clergy and advising people that repentance and renewal could be done through "the total love for God."[13] She carried on a long correspondence with Pope Gregory XI, asking him to reform the clergy and the administration of the Papal States. The oldest Protestant churches, such as the Moravian Church, date their origins to Jan Hus (John Huss) in the early 15th century. As it was led by a Bohemian noble majority, and recognised, for some time, by the Basel Compacts, the Hussite Reformation was Europe's first "Magisterial Reformation" because the ruling magistrates supported it, unlike the "Radical Reformation", which the state did not support.

Common factors that played a role during the Reformation and the Counter-Reformation included the rise of the printing press, nationalism, simony, the appointment of Cardinal-nephews, and other corruption of the Roman Curia and other ecclesiastical hierarchy, the impact of humanism, the new learning of the Renaissance versus scholasticism, and the Western Schism that eroded loyalty to the Papacy. Unrest due to the Great Schism of Western Christianity (1378–1416) excited wars between princes, uprisings among the peasants, and widespread concern over corruption in the Church, especially from John Wycliffe at Oxford University and from Jan Hus at the Charles University in Prague.[citation needed]

Hus objected to some of the practices of the Roman Catholic Church and wanted to return the church in Bohemia and Moravia to earlier practices: liturgy in the language of the people (i.e. Czech), having lay people receive communion in both kinds (bread and wine—that is, in Latin, communio sub utraque specie), married priests, and eliminating indulgences and the concept of purgatory. Some of these, like the use of local language as the liturgical language, were approved by the pope as early as in the 9th century.[14]

The leaders of the Roman Catholic Church condemned him at the Council of Constance (1414–1417) and he was burnt at the stake, despite a promise of safe-conduct.[15] Wycliffe was posthumously condemned as a heretic and his corpse exhumed and burned in 1428.[16] The Council of Constance confirmed and strengthened the traditional medieval conception of church and empire. The council did not address the national tensions or the theological tensions stirred up during the previous century and could not prevent schism and the Hussite Wars in Bohemia.[17][better source needed]

Pope Sixtus IV (1471–1484) established the practice of selling indulgences to be applied to the dead, thereby establishing a new stream of revenue with agents across Europe.[18] Pope Alexander VI (1492–1503) was one of the most controversial of the Renaissance popes. He was the father of seven children, including Lucrezia and Cesare Borgia.[19][better source needed] In response to papal corruption, particularly the sale of indulgences, Luther wrote The Ninety-Five Theses.[20][better source needed]

A number of theologians in the Holy Roman Empire preached reformation ideas in the 1510s, shortly before or simultaneously with Luther, including Christoph Schappeler in Memmingen (as early as 1513).

Magisterial Reformation

 
 
Martin Luther posted the Ninety-five Theses in 1517
 
Martin Luther at the Diet of Worms, where he refused to recant his works when asked to by Charles V. (painting from Anton von Werner, 1877, Staatsgalerie Stuttgart)

The Reformation is usually dated to 31 October 1517 in Wittenberg, Saxony, when Luther sent his Ninety-Five Theses on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences to the Archbishop of Mainz. The theses debated and criticised the Church and the papacy, but concentrated upon the selling of indulgences and doctrinal policies about purgatory, particular judgment, and the authority of the pope. He would later in the period 1517–1521 write works on devotion to Virgin Mary, the intercession of and devotion to the saints, the sacraments, mandatory clerical celibacy, and later on the authority of the pope, the ecclesiastical law, censure and excommunication, the role of secular rulers in religious matters, the relationship between Christianity and the law, good works, and monasticism.[21] Some nuns, such as Katharina von Bora and Ursula of Munsterberg, left the monastic life when they accepted the Reformation, but other orders adopted the Reformation, as Lutherans continue to have monasteries today. In contrast, Reformed areas typically secularised monastic property.[citation needed]

Reformers and their opponents made heavy use of inexpensive pamphlets as well as vernacular Bibles using the relatively new printing press, so there was swift movement of both ideas and documents.[22][23] Magdalena Heymair printed pedagogical writings for teaching children Bible stories.

Parallel to events in Germany, a movement began in Switzerland under the leadership of Huldrych Zwingli. These two movements quickly agreed on most issues, but some unresolved differences kept them separate. Some followers of Zwingli believed that the Reformation was too conservative, and moved independently toward more radical positions, some of which survive among modern day Anabaptists.

After this first stage of the Reformation, following the excommunication of Luther in Decet Romanum Pontificem and the condemnation of his followers by the edicts of the 1521 Diet of Worms, the work and writings of John Calvin were influential in establishing a loose consensus among various churches in Switzerland, Scotland, Hungary, Germany and elsewhere.

Although the German Peasants' War of 1524–1525 began as a tax and anti-corruption protest as reflected in the Twelve Articles, its leader Thomas Müntzer gave it a radical Reformation character. It swept through the Bavarian, Thuringian and Swabian principalities, including the Black Company of Florian Geier, a knight from Giebelstadt who joined the peasants in the general outrage against the Catholic hierarchy.[24] In response to reports about the destruction and violence, Luther condemned the revolt in writings such as Against the Murderous, Thieving Hordes of Peasants; Zwingli and Luther's ally Philipp Melanchthon also did not condone the uprising.[25][26] Some 100,000 peasants were killed by the end of the war.[27]

Radical Reformation

The Radical Reformation was the response to what was believed to be the corruption in both the Roman Catholic Church and the Magisterial Reformation. Beginning in Germany and Switzerland in the 16th century, the Radical Reformation developed radical Protestant churches throughout Europe. The term includes Thomas Müntzer, Andreas Karlstadt, the Zwickau prophets, and Anabaptists like the Hutterites and Mennonites.

In parts of Germany, Switzerland, and Austria, a majority sympathised with the Radical Reformation despite intense persecution.[28] Although the surviving proportion of the European population that rebelled against Catholic, Lutheran and Zwinglian churches was small, Radical Reformers wrote profusely and the literature on the Radical Reformation is disproportionately large, partly as a result of the proliferation of the Radical Reformation teachings in the United States.[29]

Despite significant diversity among the early Radical Reformers, some "repeating patterns" emerged among many Anabaptist groups. Many of these patterns were enshrined in the Schleitheim Confession (1527) and include believers' (or adult) baptism, memorial view of the Lord's Supper, belief that Scripture is the final authority on matters of faith and practice, emphasis on the New Testament and the Sermon on the Mount, interpretation of Scripture in community, separation from the world and a two-kingdom theology, pacifism and nonresistance, communal ownership and economic sharing, belief in the freedom of the will, non-swearing of oaths, "yieldedness" (Gelassenheit) to one's community and to God, the ban (i.e., shunning), salvation through divinization (Vergöttung) and ethical living, and discipleship (Nachfolge Christi).[30]

Literacy

 
Martin Luther's 1534 Bible translated into German. Luther's translation influenced the development of the current Standard German.

The Reformation was a triumph of literacy and the new printing press.[31][b][22][33] Luther's translation of the Bible into German was a decisive moment in the spread of literacy, and stimulated as well the printing and distribution of religious books and pamphlets. From 1517 onward, religious pamphlets flooded Germany and much of Europe.[34][c]

By 1530, over 10,000 publications are known, with a total of ten million copies. The Reformation was thus a media revolution. Luther strengthened his attacks on Rome by depicting a "good" against "bad" church. From there, it became clear that print could be used for propaganda in the Reformation for particular agendas, although the term propaganda derives from the Catholic Congregatio de Propaganda Fide (Congregation for Propagating the Faith) from the Counter-Reformation. Reform writers used existing styles, cliches and stereotypes which they adapted as needed.[34] Especially effective were writings in German, including Luther's translation of the Bible, his Smaller Catechism for parents teaching their children, and his Larger Catechism, for pastors.

Using the German vernacular they expressed the Apostles' Creed in simpler, more personal, Trinitarian language. Illustrations in the German Bible and in many tracts popularised Luther's ideas. Lucas Cranach the Elder (1472–1553), the great painter patronised by the electors of Wittenberg, was a close friend of Luther, and he illustrated Luther's theology for a popular audience. He dramatised Luther's views on the relationship between the Old and New Testaments, while remaining mindful of Luther's careful distinctions about proper and improper uses of visual imagery.[36]

Causes of the Reformation

 
Erasmus was a Catholic priest who inspired some of the Protestant reformers

The following supply-side factors have been identified as causes of the Reformation:[37]

  • The presence of a printing press in a city by 1500 made Protestant adoption by 1600 far more likely.[22]
  • Protestant literature was produced at greater levels in cities where media markets were more competitive, making these cities more likely to adopt Protestantism.[33]
  • Ottoman incursions decreased conflicts between Protestants and Catholics, helping the Reformation take root.[38]
  • Greater political autonomy increased the likelihood that Protestantism would be adopted.[22][39]
  • Where Protestant reformers enjoyed princely patronage, they were much more likely to succeed.[40]
  • Proximity to neighbours who adopted Protestantism increased the likelihood of adopting Protestantism.[39]
  • Cities that had higher numbers of students enrolled in heterodox universities and lower numbers enrolled in orthodox universities were more likely to adopt Protestantism.[40]

The following demand-side factors have been identified as causes of the Reformation:[37]

  • Cities with strong cults of saints were less likely to adopt Protestantism.[41]
  • Cities where primogeniture was practised were less likely to adopt Protestantism.[42]
  • Regions that were poor but had great economic potential and bad political institutions were more likely to adopt Protestantism.[43]
  • The presence of bishoprics made the adoption of Protestantism less likely.[22]
  • The presence of monasteries made the adoption of Protestantism less likely.[43]

A 2020 study linked the spread of Protestantism to personal ties to Luther (e.g. letter correspondents, visits, former students) and trade routes.[44]

Reformation in Germany

 
Political situation in Germany about 1560
 
Religious situation in Germany and Europe about 1560

In 1517, Luther nailed the Ninety-five theses to the Castle Church door, and without his knowledge or prior approval, they were copied and printed across Germany and internationally. Different reformers arose more or less independently of Luther in 1518 (for example Andreas Karlstadt, Philip Melanchthon, Erhard Schnepf, Johannes Brenz and Martin Bucer) and in 1519 (for example Huldrych Zwingli, Nikolaus von Amsdorf, Ulrich von Hutten), and so on.

After the Heidelberg Disputation (1518) where Luther described the Theology of the Cross as opposed to the Theology of Glory and the Leipzig Disputation (1519), the faith issues were brought to the attention of other German theologians throughout the Empire. Each year drew new theologians to embrace the Reformation and participate in the ongoing, European-wide discussion about faith. The pace of the Reformation proved unstoppable by 1520.

The early Reformation in Germany mostly concerns the life of Martin Luther until he was excommunicated by Pope Leo X on 3 January 1521, in the bull Decet Romanum Pontificem.[45] The exact moment Martin Luther realised the key doctrine of Justification by Faith is described in German as the Turmerlebnis. In Table Talk, Luther describes it as a sudden realization. Experts often speak of a gradual process of realization between 1514 and 1518.

Reformation ideas and Protestant church services were first introduced in cities, being supported by local citizens and also some nobles. The Reformation did not receive overt state support until 1525, although it was only due to the protection of Elector Frederick the Wise (who had a strange dream[46] the night prior to 31 October 1517) that Luther survived after being declared an outlaw, in hiding at Wartburg Castle and then returning to Wittenberg. It was more of a movement among the German people between 1517 and 1525, and then also a political one beginning in 1525. Reformer Adolf Clarenbach was burned at the stake near Cologne in 1529.

The first state to formally adopt a Protestant confession was the Duchy of Prussia (1525). Albert, Duke of Prussia formally declared the "Evangelical" faith to be the state religion. Catholics labeled self-identified Evangelicals "Lutherans" to discredit them after the practice of naming a heresy after its founder. However, the Lutheran Church traditionally sees itself as the "main trunk of the historical Christian Tree" founded by Christ and the Apostles, holding that during the Reformation, the Church of Rome fell away.[47][48] Ducal Prussia was followed by many imperial free cities and other minor imperial entities. The next sizable territories were the Landgraviate of Hesse (1526; at the Synod of Homberg) and the Electorate of Saxony (1527; Luther's homeland), Electoral Palatinate (1530s), and the Duchy of Württemberg (1534). For a more complete list, see the list of states by the date of adoption of the Reformation and the table of the adoption years for the Augsburg Confession. The reformation wave swept first the Holy Roman Empire, and then extended beyond it to the rest of the European continent.[citation needed]

Germany was home to the greatest number of Protestant reformers. Each state which turned Protestant had their own reformers who contributed towards the Evangelical faith. In Electoral Saxony the Evangelical-Lutheran Church of Saxony was organised and served as an example for other states, although Luther was not dogmatic on questions of polity.

Reformation outside Germany

The Reformation also spread widely throughout Europe, starting with Bohemia, in the Czech lands, and, over the next few decades, to other countries.

Austria

Austria followed the same pattern as the German-speaking states within the Holy Roman Empire, and Lutheranism became the main Protestant confession among its population. Lutheranism gained a significant following in the eastern half of present-day Austria, while Calvinism was less successful. Eventually the expulsions of the Counter-Reformation reversed the trend.

Czech lands

The Hussites were a Christian movement in the Kingdom of Bohemia following the teachings of Czech reformer Jan Hus.

Jan Hus

Czech reformer and university professor Jan Hus (c. 1369–1415) became the best-known representative of the Bohemian Reformation and one of the forerunners of the Protestant Reformation.

Jan Hus was declared a heretic and executed—burned at stake—at the Council of Constance in 1415 where he arrived voluntarily to defend his teachings.

Hussite movement
 
Jiří Třanovský (1592–1637), the "Luther of the Slavs" who was active in Bohemia, Moravia, Poland, and Slovakia (Upper Hungary)

This predominantly religious movement was propelled by social issues and strengthened Czech national awareness. In 1417, two years after the execution of Jan Hus, the Czech reformation quickly became the chief force in the country.

Hussites made up the vast majority of the population, forcing the Council of Basel to recognize in 1437 a system of two "religions" for the first time, signing the Compacts of Basel for the kingdom (Catholic and Czech Ultraquism a Hussite movement). Bohemia later also elected two Protestant kings (George of Poděbrady, Frederick of Palatine).

After Habsburgs took control of the region, the Hussite churches were prohibited and the kingdom partially recatholicised. Even later, Lutheranism gained a substantial following, after being permitted by the Habsburgs with the continued persecution of the Czech native Hussite churches. Many Hussites thus declared themselves Lutherans.

Two churches with Hussite roots are now the second and third biggest churches among the largely agnostic peoples: Czech Brethren (which gave origin to the international church known as the Moravian Church) and the Czechoslovak Hussite Church.

Switzerland

In Switzerland, the teachings of the reformers and especially those of Zwingli and Calvin had a profound effect, despite frequent quarrels between the different branches of the Reformation.

Huldrych Zwingli
 
Huldrych Zwingli launched the Reformation in Switzerland. Portrait by Hans Asper.

Parallel to events in Germany, a movement began in the Swiss Confederation under the leadership of Huldrych Zwingli. Zwingli was a scholar and preacher who moved to Zürich—the then-leading city state—in 1518, a year after Martin Luther began the Reformation in Germany with his Ninety-five Theses. Although the two movements agreed on many issues of theology, as the recently introduced printing press spread ideas rapidly from place to place, some unresolved differences kept them separate. Long-standing resentment between the German states and the Swiss Confederation led to heated debate over how much Zwingli owed his ideas to Lutheranism. Although Zwinglianism does hold uncanny resemblance to Lutheranism (it even had its own equivalent of the Ninety-five Theses, called the 67 Conclusions), historians have been unable to prove that Zwingli had any contact with Luther's publications before 1520, and Zwingli himself maintained that he had prevented himself from reading them.

The German Prince Philip of Hesse saw potential in creating an alliance between Zwingli and Luther, seeing strength in a united Protestant front. A meeting was held in his castle in 1529, now known as the Colloquy of Marburg, which has become infamous for its complete failure. The two men could not come to any agreement due to their disputation over one key doctrine. Although Luther preached consubstantiation in the Eucharist over transubstantiation, he believed in the real presence of Christ in the Communion bread. Zwingli, inspired by Dutch theologian Cornelius Hoen, believed that the Communion bread was only representative and memorial—Christ was not present.[49] Luther became so angry that he famously carved into the meeting table in chalk Hoc Est Corpus Meum—a Biblical quotation from the Last Supper meaning "This is my body". Zwingli countered this saying that est in that context was the equivalent of the word significat (signifies).[50]

Some followers of Zwingli believed that the Reformation was too conservative and moved independently toward more radical positions, some of which survive among modern day Anabaptists. One famous incident illustrating this was when radical Zwinglians fried and ate sausages during Lent in Zurich city square by way of protest against the Church teaching of good works. Other Protestant movements grew up along the lines of mysticism or humanism (cf. Erasmus and Louis de Berquin who was martyred in 1529), sometimes breaking from Rome or from the Protestants, or forming outside of the churches.

John Calvin
 
John Calvin was one of the leading figures of the Reformation. His legacy remains in a variety of churches.

Following the excommunication of Luther and condemnation of the Reformation by the Pope, the work and writings of John Calvin were influential in establishing a loose consensus among various churches in Switzerland, Scotland, Hungary, Germany and elsewhere. After the expulsion of its Bishop in 1526, and the unsuccessful attempts of the Berne reformer Guillaume (William) Farel, Calvin was asked to use the organisational skill he had gathered as a student of law to discipline the "fallen city" of Geneva. His "Ordinances" of 1541 involved a collaboration of Church affairs with the City council and consistory to bring morality to all areas of life. After the establishment of the Geneva academy in 1559, Geneva became the unofficial capital of the Protestant movement, providing refuge for Protestant exiles from all over Europe and educating them as Calvinist missionaries. These missionaries dispersed Calvinism widely, and formed the French Huguenots in Calvin's own lifetime and spread to Scotland under the leadership of John Knox in 1560. Anne Locke translated some of Calvin's writings to English around this time. The faith continued to spread after Calvin's death in 1563 and reached as far as Constantinople by the start of the 17th century.[citation needed]

The Reformation foundations engaged with Augustinianism. Both Luther and Calvin thought along lines linked with the theological teachings of Augustine of Hippo. The Augustinianism of the Reformers struggled against Pelagianism, a heresy that they perceived in the Catholic Church of their day. Ultimately, since Calvin and Luther disagreed strongly on certain matters of theology (such as double-predestination and Holy Communion), the relationship between Lutherans and Calvinists was one of conflict.

Nordic countries

 
The seal of the Diocese of Turku (Finland) during the 16th and 17th centuries featured the finger of St Henry. The post-Reformation diocese included the relic of a pre-Reformation saint in its seal.

All of Scandinavia ultimately adopted Lutheranism over the course of the 16th century, as the monarchs of Denmark (who also ruled Norway and Iceland) and Sweden (who also ruled Finland) converted to that faith.

Sweden

In Sweden, the Reformation was spearheaded by Gustav Vasa, elected king in 1523, with major contributions by Olaus Petri, a Swedish clergyman. Friction with the pope over the latter's interference in Swedish ecclesiastical affairs led to the discontinuance of any official connection between Sweden and the papacy since 1523. Four years later, at the Diet of Västerås, the king succeeded in forcing the diet to accept his dominion over the national church. The king was given possession of all church property, church appointments required royal approval, the clergy were subject to the civil law, and the "pure Word of God" was to be preached in the churches and taught in the schools—effectively granting official sanction to Lutheran ideas. The apostolic succession was retained in Sweden during the Reformation. The adoption of Lutheranism was also one of the main reasons for the eruption of the Dacke War, a peasants uprising in Småland.

Finland
Denmark

Under the reign of Frederick I (1523–33), Denmark remained officially Catholic.[51] Frederick initially pledged to persecute Lutherans,[52] yet he quickly adopted a policy of protecting Lutheran preachers and reformers, of whom the most famous was Hans Tausen.[51] During his reign, Lutheranism made significant inroads among the Danish population.[51] In 1526, Frederick forbade papal investiture of bishops in Denmark and in 1527 ordered fees from new bishops be paid to the crown, making Frederick the head of the church of Denmark.[51] Frederick's son, Christian, was openly Lutheran, which prevented his election to the throne upon his father's death. In 1536, following his victory in the Count's War, he became king as Christian III and continued the Reformation of the state church with assistance from Johannes Bugenhagen. By the Copenhagen recess of October 1536, the authority of the Catholic bishops was terminated.[53]

Faroe Islands
Iceland

Luther's influence had already reached Iceland before King Christian's decree. The Germans fished near Iceland's coast, and the Hanseatic League engaged in commerce with the Icelanders. These Germans raised a Lutheran church in Hafnarfjörður as early as 1533. Through German trade connections, many young Icelanders studied in Hamburg.[54] In 1538, when the kingly decree of the new Church ordinance reached Iceland, bishop Ögmundur and his clergy denounced it, threatening excommunication for anyone subscribing to the German "heresy".[55] In 1539, the King sent a new governor to Iceland, Klaus von Mervitz, with a mandate to introduce reform and take possession of church property.[55] Von Mervitz seized a monastery in Viðey with the help of his sheriff, Dietrich of Minden, and his soldiers. They drove the monks out and seized all their possessions, for which they were promptly excommunicated by Ögmundur.

United Kingdom

England
Church of England
 
Henry VIII broke England's ties with the Roman Catholic Church, becoming the sole head of the English Church.

The separation of the Church of England from Rome under Henry VIII, beginning in 1529 and completed in 1537, brought England alongside this broad Reformation movement. Although Robert Barnes attempted to get Henry VIII to adopt Lutheran theology, he refused to do so in 1538 and burned him at the stake in 1540. Reformers in the Church of England alternated, for decades, between sympathies between Catholic tradition and Reformed principles, gradually developing, within the context of robustly Protestant doctrine, a tradition considered a middle way (via media) between the Catholic and Protestant traditions.[citation needed]

The English Reformation followed a different course from the Reformation in continental Europe. There had long been a strong strain of anti-clericalism. England had already given rise to the Lollard movement of John Wycliffe, which played an important part in inspiring the Hussites in Bohemia. Lollardy was suppressed and became an underground movement, so the extent of its influence in the 1520s is difficult to assess. The different character of the English Reformation came rather from the fact that it was driven initially by the political necessities of Henry VIII.

Henry had once been a sincere Catholic and had even authored a book strongly criticising Luther. His wife, Catherine of Aragon, bore him only a single child who survived infancy, Mary. Henry strongly wanted a male heir, and many of his subjects might have agreed, if only because they wanted to avoid another dynastic conflict like the Wars of the Roses.[citation needed]

 
Thomas Cranmer proved essential in the development of the English Reformation.

Refused an annulment of his marriage to Catherine, King Henry decided to remove the Church of England from the authority of Rome.[56] In 1534, the Act of Supremacy recognised Henry as "the only Supreme Head on earth of the Church of England".[57] Between 1535 and 1540, under Thomas Cromwell, the policy known as the Dissolution of the Monasteries was put into effect. The veneration of some saints, certain pilgrimages and some pilgrim shrines were also attacked. Huge amounts of church land and property passed into the hands of the Crown and ultimately into those of the nobility and gentry. The vested interest thus created made for a powerful force in support of the dissolution.[citation needed]

There were some notable opponents to the Henrician Reformation, such as Thomas More and Cardinal John Fisher, who were executed for their opposition. There was also a growing party of reformers who were imbued with the Calvinistic, Lutheran and Zwinglian doctrines then current on the Continent. When Henry died he was succeeded by his Protestant son Edward VI, who, through his empowered councillors (with the King being only nine years old at his succession and fifteen at his death) the Duke of Somerset and the Duke of Northumberland, ordered the destruction of images in churches, and the closing of the chantries. Under Edward VI the Church of England moved closer to continental Protestantism.

Yet, at a popular level, religion in England was still in a state of flux. Following a brief Catholic restoration during the reign of Mary (1553–1558), a loose consensus developed during the reign of Elizabeth I, though this point is one of considerable debate among historians. This "Elizabethan Religious Settlement" largely formed Anglicanism into a distinctive church tradition. The compromise was uneasy and was capable of veering between extreme Calvinism on one hand and Catholicism on the other. But compared to the bloody and chaotic state of affairs in contemporary France, it was relatively successful, in part because Queen Elizabeth lived so long, until the Puritan Revolution or English Civil War in the seventeenth century.[citation needed]

English dissenters
 
Oliver Cromwell was a devout Puritan and military leader, who became Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and Ireland.

The success of the Counter-Reformation on the Continent and the growth of a Puritan party dedicated to further Protestant reform polarised the Elizabethan Age, although it was not until the 1640s that England underwent religious strife comparable to what its neighbours had suffered some generations before.

The early Puritan movement (late 16th–17th centuries) was Reformed (or Calvinist) and was a movement for reform in the Church of England. Its origins lay in the discontent with the Elizabethan Religious Settlement. The desire was for the Church of England to resemble more closely the Protestant churches of Europe, especially Geneva. The Puritans objected to ornaments and ritual in the churches as idolatrous (vestments, surplices, organs, genuflection), calling the vestments "popish pomp and rags" (see Vestments controversy). They also objected to ecclesiastical courts. Their refusal to endorse completely all of the ritual directions and formulas of the Book of Common Prayer, and the imposition of its liturgical order by legal force and inspection, sharpened Puritanism into a definite opposition movement.[citation needed]

The later Puritan movement, often referred to as dissenters and nonconformists, eventually led to the formation of various Reformed denominations.

The most famous emigration to America was the migration of Puritan separatists from the Anglican Church of England. They fled first to Holland, and then later to America to establish the English colony of Massachusetts in New England, which later became one of the original United States. These Puritan separatists were also known as "the Pilgrims". After establishing a colony at Plymouth (which became part of the colony of Massachusetts) in 1620, the Puritan pilgrims received a charter from the King of England that legitimised their colony, allowing them to do trade and commerce with merchants in England, in accordance with the principles of mercantilism. The Puritans persecuted those of other religious faiths,[58] for example, Anne Hutchinson was banished to Rhode Island during the Antinomian Controversy and Quaker Mary Dyer was hanged in Boston for repeatedly defying a Puritan law banning Quakers from the colony.[59] She was one of the four executed Quakers known as the Boston martyrs. Executions ceased in 1661 when King Charles II explicitly forbade Massachusetts from executing anyone for professing Quakerism.[60] In 1647, Massachusetts passed a law prohibiting any Jesuit Roman Catholic priests from entering territory under Puritan jurisdiction.[61] Any suspected person who could not clear himself was to be banished from the colony; a second offence carried a death penalty.[62]

The Pilgrims held radical Protestant disapproval of Christmas, and its celebration was outlawed in Boston from 1659 to 1681.[63] The ban was revoked in 1681 by the English-appointed governor Edmund Andros, who also revoked a Puritan ban on festivities on Saturday nights.[63] Nevertheless, it was not until the mid-19th century that celebrating Christmas became fashionable in the Boston region.[64]

Wales

Bishop Richard Davies and dissident Protestant cleric John Penry introduced Calvinist theology to Wales. In 1588, the Bishop of Llandaff published the entire Bible in the Welsh language. The translation had a significant impact upon the Welsh population and helped to firmly establish Protestantism among the Welsh people.[65] The Welsh Protestants used the model of the Synod of Dort of 1618–1619. Calvinism developed through the Puritan period, following the restoration of the monarchy under Charles II, and within Wales' Calvinistic Methodist movement. However few copies of Calvin's writings were available before mid-19th century.[66]

Scotland
 
John Knox was a leading figure in the Scottish Reformation

The Reformation in Scotland's case culminated ecclesiastically in the establishment of a church along reformed lines, and politically in the triumph of English influence over that of France. John Knox is regarded as the leader of the Scottish reformation.

The Reformation Parliament of 1560 repudiated the pope's authority by the Papal Jurisdiction Act 1560, forbade the celebration of the Mass and approved a Protestant Confession of Faith. It was made possible by a revolution against French hegemony under the regime of the regent Mary of Guise, who had governed Scotland in the name of her absent daughter Mary, Queen of Scots (then also Queen of France).

Although Protestantism triumphed relatively easily in Scotland, the exact form of Protestantism remained to be determined. The 17th century saw a complex struggle between Presbyterianism (particularly the Covenanters) and Episcopalianism. The Presbyterians eventually won control of the Church of Scotland, which went on to have an important influence on Presbyterian churches worldwide, but Scotland retained a relatively large Episcopalian minority.[67]

Estonia

France

 
Although a Catholic clergyman himself, Cardinal Richelieu allied France with Protestant states.

Besides the Waldensians already present in France, Protestantism also spread in from German lands, where the Protestants were nicknamed Huguenots; this eventually led to decades of civil warfare.

Though not personally interested in religious reform, Francis I (reigned 1515–1547) initially maintained an attitude of tolerance, in accordance with his interest in the humanist movement. This changed in 1534 with the Affair of the Placards. In this act, Protestants denounced the Catholic Mass in placards that appeared across France, even reaching the royal apartments. During this time as the issue of religious faith entered into the arena of politics, Francis came to view the movement as a threat to the kingdom's stability.

Following the Affair of the Placards, culprits were rounded up, at least a dozen heretics were put to death, and the persecution of Protestants increased.[68] One of those who fled France at that time was John Calvin, who emigrated to Basel in 1535 before eventually settling in Geneva in 1536. Beyond the reach of the French kings in Geneva, Calvin continued to take an interest in the religious affairs of his native land including the training of ministers for congregations in France.

As the number of Protestants in France increased, the number of heretics in prisons awaiting trial also grew. As an experimental approach to reduce the caseload in Normandy, a special court just for the trial of heretics was established in 1545 in the Parlement de Rouen.[69][70] When Henry II took the throne in 1547, the persecution of Protestants grew and special courts for the trial of heretics were also established in the Parlement de Paris. These courts came to known as "La Chambre Ardente" ("the fiery chamber") because of their reputation of meting out death penalties on burning gallows.[71]

Despite heavy persecution by Henry II, the Reformed Church of France, largely Calvinist in direction, made steady progress across large sections of the nation, in the urban bourgeoisie and parts of the aristocracy, appealing to people alienated by the obduracy and the complacency of the Catholic establishment.

French Protestantism, though its appeal increased under persecution, came to acquire a distinctly political character, made all the more obvious by the conversions of nobles during the 1550s. This established the preconditions for a series of destructive and intermittent conflicts, known as the Wars of Religion. The civil wars gained impetus with the sudden death of Henry II in 1559, which began a prolonged period of weakness for the French crown. Atrocity and outrage became the defining characteristics of the time, illustrated at their most intense in the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre of August 1572, when the Catholic party killed between 30,000 and 100,000 Huguenots across France. The wars only concluded when Henry IV, himself a former Huguenot, issued the Edict of Nantes (1598), promising official toleration of the Protestant minority, but under highly restricted conditions. Catholicism remained the official state religion, and the fortunes of French Protestants gradually declined over the next century, culminating in Louis XIV's Edict of Fontainebleau (1685), which revoked the Edict of Nantes and made Catholicism the sole legal religion of France, leading some Huguenots to live as Nicodemites.[72] In response to the Edict of Fontainebleau, Frederick William I, Elector of Brandenburg declared the Edict of Potsdam (October 1685), giving free passage to Huguenot refugees and tax-free status to them for ten years.

In the late 17th century, 150,000–200,000 Huguenots fled to England, the Netherlands, Prussia, Switzerland, and the English and Dutch overseas colonies.[73] A significant community in France remained in the Cévennes region. A separate Protestant community, of the Lutheran faith, existed in the newly conquered province of Alsace, its status not affected by the Edict of Fontainebleau.

Spain

 
The New Testament translated by Enzinas, published in Antwerp (1543)
 
The New Testament translated by Joanes Leizarraga into the Basque language (1571) on the orders of Navarre's Calvinist queen, Jeanne III of Navarre

In the early 16th century, Spain had a different political and cultural milieu from its Western and Central European neighbours in several respects, which affected the mentality and the reaction of the nation towards the Reformation. Spain, which had only recently managed to complete the reconquest of the Peninsula from the Moors in 1492, had been preoccupied with converting the Muslim and Jewish populations of the newly conquered regions through the establishment of the Spanish Inquisition in 1478. The rulers of the nation stressed political, cultural, and religious unity, and by the time of the Lutheran Reformation, the Spanish Inquisition was already 40 years old and had the capability of quickly persecuting any new movement that the leaders of the Catholic Church perceived or interpreted to be religious heterodoxy.[74] Charles V did not wish to see Spain or the rest of Habsburg Europe divided, and in light of continual threat from the Ottomans, preferred to see the Roman Catholic Church reform itself from within. This led to a Counter-Reformation in Spain in the 1530s. During the 1520s, the Spanish Inquisition had created an atmosphere of suspicion and sought to root out any religious thought seen as suspicious. As early as 1521, the Pope had written a letter to the Spanish monarchy warning against allowing the unrest in Northern Europe to be replicated in Spain. Between 1520 and 1550, printing presses in Spain were tightly controlled and any books of Protestant teaching were prohibited.

 
Contemporary illustration of the auto-da-fé of Valladolid, in which fourteen Protestants were burned at the stake for their faith, on 21 May 1559

Between 1530 and 1540, Protestantism in Spain was still able to gain followers clandestinely, and in cities such as Seville and Valladolid adherents would secretly meet at private houses to pray and study the Bible.[75] Protestants in Spain were estimated at between 1000 and 3000, mainly among intellectuals who had seen writings such as those of Erasmus. Notable reformers included Dr. Juan Gil and Juan Pérez de Pineda who subsequently fled and worked alongside others such as Francisco de Enzinas to translate the Greek New Testament into the Spanish language, a task completed by 1556. Protestant teachings were smuggled into Spain by Spaniards such as Julián Hernández, who in 1557 was condemned by the Inquisition and burnt at the stake. Under Philip II, conservatives in the Spanish church tightened their grip, and those who refused to recant such as Rodrigo de Valer were condemned to life imprisonment. In May 1559, sixteen Spanish Lutherans were burnt at the stake: fourteen were strangled before being burnt, while two were burnt alive. In October another thirty were executed. Spanish Protestants who were able to flee the country were to be found in at least a dozen cities in Europe, such as Geneva, where some of them embraced Calvinist teachings. Those who fled to England were given support by the Church of England.[citation needed]

The Kingdom of Navarre, although by the time of the Protestant Reformation a minor principality territoriality restricted to southern France, had French Huguenot monarchs, including Henry IV of France and his mother, Jeanne III of Navarre, a devout Calvinist.

Upon the arrival of the Protestant Reformation, Calvinism reached some Basques through the translation of the Bible into the Basque language by Joanes Leizarraga. As Queen of Navarre, Jeanne III commissioned the translation of the New Testament into Basque[d] and Béarnese for the benefit of her subjects.

Molinism presented a soteriology similar to Protestants within the Roman Catholic Church.

Portugal

During the Reformation era Protestantism was unsuccessful in Portugal, as its spread was frustrated for similar reasons to those in Spain.

Netherlands

 
Anabaptist Dirk Willems rescues his pursuer and is subsequently burned at the stake in 1569.

The Reformation in the Netherlands, unlike in many other countries, was not initiated by the rulers of the Seventeen Provinces, but instead by multiple popular movements which in turn were bolstered by the arrival of Protestant refugees from other parts of the continent. While the Anabaptist movement enjoyed popularity in the region in the early decades of the Reformation, Calvinism, in the form of the Dutch Reformed Church, became the dominant Protestant faith in the country from the 1560s onward. In the early 17th century internal theological conflict within the Calvinist church between two tendencies of Calvinism, the Gomarists and the liberal Arminians (or Remonstrants), resulted in Gomarist Calvinism becoming the de facto state religion.

Belgium

The first two Lutheran martyrs were monks from Antwerp, Johann Esch and Heinrich Hoes, who were burned at the stake when they would not recant.

Harsh persecution of Protestants by the Spanish government of Philip II contributed to a desire for independence in the provinces, which led to the Eighty Years' War and, eventually, the separation of the largely Protestant Dutch Republic from the Catholic-dominated Southern Netherlands (present-day Belgium).

In 1566, at the peak of Belgian Reformation, there were an estimated 300,000 Protestants, or 20% of the Belgian population.[76]

Latvia

Luxembourg

Luxembourg, a part of the Spanish Netherlands, remained Catholic during the Reformation era because Protestantism was illegal until 1768.

Hungary

 
Stephen Bocskay prevented the Holy Roman Emperor from imposing Catholicism on Hungarians.

Much of the population of the Kingdom of Hungary adopted Protestantism during the 16th century. After the 1526 Battle of Mohács, the Hungarian people were disillusioned by the inability of the government to protect them and turned to the faith they felt would infuse them with the strength necessary to resist the invader. They found this in the teaching of Protestant reformers such as Martin Luther. The spread of Protestantism in the country was assisted by its large ethnic German minority, which could understand and translate the writings of Martin Luther. While Lutheranism gained a foothold among the German- and Slovak-speaking populations, Calvinism became widely accepted among ethnic Hungarians.

In the more independent northwest, the rulers and priests, protected now by the Habsburg monarchy, which had taken the field to fight the Turks, defended the old Catholic faith. They dragged the Protestants to prison and the stake wherever they could. Such strong measures only fanned the flames of protest, however. Leaders of the Protestants included Mátyás Dévai Bíró, Mihály Sztárai, István Szegedi Kis, and Ferenc Dávid.

Protestants likely formed a majority of Hungary's population at the close of the 16th century, but Counter-Reformation efforts in the 17th century reconverted a majority of the kingdom to Catholicism. A significant Protestant minority remained, most of it adhering to the Calvinist faith.

In 1558 the Transylvanian Diet of Turda decreed the free practice of both the Catholic and Lutheran religions, but prohibited Calvinism. Ten years later, in 1568, the Diet extended this freedom, declaring that "It is not allowed to anybody to intimidate anybody with captivity or expulsion for his religion". Four religions were declared to be "accepted" (recepta) religions (the fourth being Unitarianism, which became official in 1583 as the faith of the only Unitarian king, John II Sigismund Zápolya, r. 1540–1571), while Eastern Orthodox Christianity was "tolerated" (though the building of stone Orthodox churches was forbidden). During the Thirty Years' War, Royal (Habsburg) Hungary joined the Catholic side, until Transylvania joined the Protestant side.[citation needed]

Between 1604 and 1711, there was a series of anti-Habsburg uprisings calling for equal rights and freedom for all Christian denominations, with varying success; the uprisings were usually organised from Transylvania. The Habsburg-sanctioned Counter-Reformation efforts in the 17th century reconverted the majority of the kingdom to Catholicism.

The center of Protestant learning in Hungary has for some centuries been the University of Debrecen. Founded in 1538, the university was situated in an area of Eastern Hungary under Ottoman Turkish rule during the 1600s and 1700s, being allowed Islamic toleration and thus avoiding Counter-Reformation persecution.

Romania

Transylvania in what is today's Romania was a "dumping ground for undesirables" by the Habsburg monarchy. People who did not conform to the will of the Habsburgs and the leaders of the Catholic Church were forcibly sent there. Centuries of this practice allowed diverse Protestant traditions to emerge in Romania, including Lutheranism, Calvinism and Unitarianism.

Ukraine

Calvinism was popular among Hungarians who inhabited the southwestern parts of the present-day Ukraine. Their descendants are still there, such as the Sub-Carpathian Reformed Church.

Belarus

The first Protestant congregation was founded in Brest-Litovsk in the Reformed tradition, and the Belarusian Evangelical Reformed Church exists today.

Ireland

 
A devout Catholic, Mary I of England started the first Plantations of Ireland, which, ironically, soon came to be associated with Protestantism.

The Reformation in Ireland was a movement for the reform of religious life and institutions that was introduced into Ireland by the English administration at the behest of King Henry VIII of England. His desire for an annulment of his marriage was known as the King's Great Matter. Ultimately Pope Clement VII refused the petition; consequently it became necessary for the King to assert his lordship over the church in his realm to give legal effect to his wishes. The English Parliament confirmed the King's supremacy over the Church in the Kingdom of England. This challenge to Papal supremacy resulted in a breach with the Roman Catholic Church. By 1541, the Irish Parliament had agreed to the change in status of the country from that of a Lordship to that of Kingdom of Ireland.[citation needed]

Unlike similar movements for religious reform on the continent of Europe, the various phases of the English Reformation as it developed in Ireland were largely driven by changes in government policy, to which public opinion in England gradually accommodated itself. However, a number of factors complicated the adoption of the religious innovations in Ireland; the majority of the population there adhered to the Catholic Church. However, in the city of Dublin the Reformation took hold under the auspices of George Browne, Archbishop of Dublin.[citation needed]

Italy

 
Waldensian symbol Lux lucet in tenebris ("Light glows in the darkness")

Word of the Protestant reformers reached Italy in the 1520s but never caught on. Its development was stopped by the Counter-Reformation, the Inquisition and also popular disinterest. Not only was the Church highly aggressive in seeking out and suppressing heresy, but there was a shortage of Protestant leadership. No one translated the Bible into Italian; few tracts were written. No core of Protestantism emerged. The few preachers who did take an interest in "Lutheranism", as it was called in Italy, were suppressed or went into exile to northern countries where their message was well received. As a result, the Reformation exerted almost no lasting influence in Italy, except for strengthening the Catholic Church and pushing for an end to ongoing abuses during the Counter-Reformation.[77][78]

Some Protestants left Italy and became outstanding activists of the European Reformation, mainly in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (e.g. Giorgio Biandrata, Bernardino Ochino, Giovanni Alciato, Giovanni Battista Cetis, Fausto Sozzini, Francesco Stancaro and Giovanni Valentino Gentile), who propagated Nontrinitarianism there and were chief instigators of the movement of Polish Brethren.[79] Some also fled to England and Switzerland, including Peter Vermigli.

In 1532, the Waldensians, who had been already present centuries before the Reformation, aligned themselves and adopted the Calvinist theology. The Waldensian Church survived in the Western Alps through many persecutions and remains a Protestant church in Italy.[80]

Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth

 
Jan Łaski sought unity between various Christian Churches in the Commonwealth, and participated in the English Reformation.

In the first half of the 16th century, the enormous Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth was a country of many religions and Churches, including: Roman Catholics, Byzantine Orthodox, Armenian Oriental Orthodox, Ashkenazi Jews, Karaites, and Sunni Muslims. The various groups had their own juridical systems. On the eve of the Protestant Reformation, Christianity held the predominant position within the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and Catholicism received preferential treatment at the expense of the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox.

The Reformation first entered Poland through the mostly German-speaking areas in the country's north. In the 1520s Luther's reforms spread among the mostly German-speaking inhabitants of such major cities as Danzig (now Gdańsk), Thorn (now Toruń) and Elbing (now Elbląg). In Königsberg (now Kaliningrad), in 1530, a Polish-language edition of Luther's Small Catechism was published. The Duchy of Prussia, a vassal of the Polish Crown ruled by the Teutonic Knights, emerged as a key center of the movement, with numerous publishing houses issuing not only Bibles, but also catechisms, in German, Polish and Lithuanian. In 1525 the last Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights secularised the territory, became Lutheran, and established Lutheranism as the state church.

Lutheranism found few adherents among the other peoples of the two countries. Calvinism became the most numerous Protestant group because Calvin's teachings on the role of the state within religion appealed to the nobility (known as szlachta), mainly in Lesser Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Several publishing houses were opened in Lesser Poland in the mid-16th century in such locations as Słomniki and Raków. At that time, Mennonites and Czech Brothers came to Poland. The former settled in the Vistula Delta where they used their agricultural abilities to turn parts of the delta into plodders. The latter settled mostly in Greater Poland around Leszno. Later on, Socinus and his followers emigrated to Poland. Originally the Reformed Church in Poland included both the Calvinists and the Anti-trinitarians (also known as the Socinians and the Polish Brethren); however, they eventually split due to an inability to reconcile their divergent views on the Trinity. Both Catholics and Orthodox Christians converts became Calvinists and the Anti-Trinitarians.[citation needed]

The Commonwealth was unique in Europe in the 16th century for its widespread tolerance confirmed by the Warsaw Confederation. This agreement granted religious toleration to all nobles: peasants living on nobile estates did not receive the same protections. In 1563, the Brest Bible was published (see also Bible translations into Polish). The period of tolerance came under strain during the reign of King Sigismund III Vasa (Zygmunt Wasa). Sigismund, who was also the King of Sweden until deposed, was educated by Jesuits in Sweden before his election as King of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. During his reign, he selected Catholics for the highest offices in the country. This created resentment amongst the Protestant nobility; however, the country did not experience a religiously motivated civil war. Despite concerted efforts, the nobility rejected efforts to revise or rescind the Confederation of Warsaw, and protected this agreement.

The Deluge, a 20-year period of almost continual warfare, marked the turning point in attitudes. During the war with Sweden, when King John Casimir (Jan Kazimierz) fled to Silesia, the Icon of Mary of Częstochowa became the rallying point for military opposition to the Swedish forces. Upon his return to the country Kihn John Casimir crowned Mary a Queen of Poland. Despite these wars against Protestant, Orthodox, and Muslim neighbours, the Confederation of Warsaw held with one notable exception. In the aftermath of the Swedish withdrawal and truce, attitudes throughout the nobility (Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant) turned against the Polish Brethren. In 1658 the Polish Brethren were forced to leave the country. They were permitted to sell their immovable property and take their movable property; however, it is still unknown whether they received fair-market value for their lands. In 1666, the Sejm banned apostasy from Catholicism to any other religion, under penalty of death. Finally, in 1717, the Silent Sejm banned non-Catholics from becoming deputies of the Parliament.[citation needed]

The strategy the Catholic Church took towards reconverting the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth differed from its strategy elsewhere. The unique government (Poland was a republic where the citizen nobility owned the state) meant the king could not enforce a religious settlement even he if so desired. Instead the Catholic Church undertook a long and steady campaign of persuasion. In the Ruthenian lands (predominately modern day Belarus & Ukraine) the Orthodox Church also undertook a similar strategy. Additionally, the Orthodox also sought to join the Catholic Church (accomplished in the Union of Brześć [Brest]); however, this union failed to achieve a lasting, permanent, and complete union of the Catholics and Orthodox in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. An important component of the Catholic Reformation in Poland was education. Numerous colleges and universities were set up throughout the country: the Jesuits and Piarists were important in this regard but there were contributions of other religious orders such as the Dominicans. While in the middle of the 16th century the nobility mostly sent their sons abroad for education (the new German Protestant universities were important in this regard), by the mid-1600s the nobility mostly stayed home for education. The quality of the new Catholic schools was so great that Protestants willingly sent their children to these schools. Through their education, many nobles became appreciative of Catholicism or out-right converted. Even though the majority of the nobility were Catholic circa 1700, Protestants remained in these lands and pockets of Protestantism could be found outside the German-speaking lands of the former Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth into the 20th century.[citation needed]

Among the most important Protestants of the Commonwealth were Mikołaj Rej, Marcin Czechowic, Andrzej Frycz Modrzewski and Symon Budny.

For more information see the following:

  • Kot, Stanislas. Socinianism in Poland: The Social and Political Ideas of the Polish Antitrinitarians in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Translated by Earl Morse Wilbur. Bacon Hill Boston: Starr King Press, 1957.
  • Tazbir, Janusz. A State without Stakes: Polish Religious Toleration in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Translated by A. T. Jordan. Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy, 1973.
  • Kłoczowski, Jerzy. A History of Polish Christianity. [Dzieje Chrześcijaństwa Polskiego].English. Cambridge, U.K.; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2000.
  • Gudziak, Borys A. Crisis and Reform: The Kyivan Metropolitanate, the Patriarchate of Constantinople, and the Genesis of the Union of Brest. Harvard Series in Ukrainian Studies, 2001.
  • Teter, Magda. Jews and Heretics in Catholic Poland: A Beleaguered Church in the Post-Reformation Era. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.
  • Nowakowska, Natalia. King Sigismund of Poland and Martin Luther: The Reformation before Confessionalization. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press, 2018.

Moldova

 
Reformation in Moldova

The Reformation was very insignificant in what is now Moldova and saw single congregations of Hussitism and Calvinism being founded across Besserabia. During the Reformation era, Moldova was repeatedly invaded.

Slovenia

 
Primož Trubar, a Lutheran reformer in Slovenia

Primož Trubar is notable for consolidating the Slovene language and is considered to be the key figure of Slovenian cultural history, in many aspects a major Slovene historical personality.[81] He was the key figure of the Protestant Church of the Slovene Lands, as he was its founder and its first superintendent. The first books in Slovene, Catechismus and Abecedarium, were written by Trubar.[82]

Slovakia

At one point in history[when?], the majority of Slovaks (~60%) were Lutherans. Calvinism was popular among the Hungarians who inhabited the southernmost parts of what is now Slovakia. Back then, Slovakia used to be a part of the Kingdom of Hungary. The Counter-Reformation implemented by the Habsburgs severely damaged Slovakian Protestantism, although in the 2010s Protestants are still a substantial minority (~10%) in the country.

Croatia

Lutheranism reached northern parts of the country.

Serbia

Vojvodina turned partially Lutheran.

Greece

The Protestant teachings of the Western Church were also briefly adopted within the Eastern Orthodox Church through the Greek Patriarch Cyril Lucaris in 1629 with the publishing of the Confessio (Calvinistic doctrine) in Geneva. Motivating factors in their decision to adopt aspects of the Reformation included the historical rivalry and mistrust between the Greek Orthodox and the Roman Catholic Churches along with their concerns of Jesuit priests entering Greek lands in their attempts to propagate the teachings of the Counter-Reformation to the Greek populace. He subsequently sponsored Maximos of Gallipoli's translation of the New Testament into the Modern Greek language and it was published in Geneva in 1638. Upon Lucaris's death in 1638, the conservative factions within the Eastern Orthodox Church held two synods: the Synod of Constantinople (1638) and Synod of Iași (1642) criticising the reforms and, in the 1672 convocation led by Dositheos, they officially condemned the Calvinistic doctrines.

In 2019, Christos Yannaras told Norman Russell that although he had participated in the Zoë movement, he had come to regard it as Crypto-Protestant.[83]

Ottoman Empire

Spread

The Reformation spread throughout Europe beginning in 1517, reaching its peak between 1545 and 1620. The greatest geographical extent of Protestantism occurred at some point between 1545 and 1620. In 1620, the Battle of White Mountain defeated Protestants in Bohemia (now the Czech Republic) who sought to have the 1609 Letter of Majesty upheld.

 
Religious fragmentation in Central Europe at the outbreak of the Thirty Years' War (1618).


 
The Reformation at its peak, superimposed on modern European borders

.

The Thirty Years' War began in 1618 and brought a drastic territorial and demographic decline when the House of Habsburg introduced counter-reformational measures throughout their vast possessions in Central Europe. Although the Thirty Years' War concluded with the Peace of Westphalia, the French Wars of the Counter-Reformation continued, as well as the expulsion of Protestants in Austria.

 
The Reformation & the Counter-Reformation—both at their end—and superimposed on modern European borders

According to a 2020 study in the American Sociological Review, the Reformation spread earliest to areas where Luther had pre-existing social relations, such as mail correspondents, and former students, as well as where he had visited. The study argues that these social ties contributed more to the Reformation's early breakthroughs than the printing press.[84]

Conclusion and legacy

There is no universal agreement on the exact or approximate date the Reformation ended. Various interpretations emphasise different dates, entire periods, or argue that the Reformation never really ended.[85] However, there are a few popular interpretations. Peace of Augsburg in 1555 officially ended the religious struggle between the two groups and made the legal division of Christianity permanent within the Holy Roman Empire, allowing rulers to choose either Lutheranism or Roman Catholicism as the official confession of their state. It could be considered to end with the enactment of the confessions of faith. Other suggested ending years relate to the Counter-Reformation or the 1648 Peace of Westphalia. From a Catholic perspective, the Second Vatican Council called for an end to the Counter-Reformation.[86]

  • In the history of theology or philosophy, the Reformation era ended with the Age of Orthodoxy. The Orthodox Period, also termed the Scholastic Period, succeeded the Reformation with the 1545–1563 Council of Trent, the 1562 Anglican Thirty-nine Articles, the 1580 Book of Concord, and other confessions of faith. The Orthodox Era ended with the development of both Pietism and the Enlightenment.
  • The Peace of Westphalia might be considered to be the event that ended the Reformation.
  • Some historians[who?] argue that the Reformation never ended as new churches have splintered from the Catholic Church (e.g., Old Catholics, Polish National Catholic Church, etc.), as well as all the various Protestant churches that exist today. No church splintering from the Catholic Church since the 17th century has done so on the basis of the same issues animating the Reformation, however.[citation needed]

Thirty Years' War: 1618–1648

 
Treaty of Westphalia allowed Calvinism to be freely exercised, reducing the need for Crypto-Calvinism

The Reformation and Counter-Reformation era conflicts are termed the European wars of religion. In particular, the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) devastated much of Germany, killing between 25% and 40% of its entire population.[87] The Catholic House of Habsburg and its allies fought against the Protestant princes of Germany, supported at various times by Denmark, Sweden and France. The Habsburgs, who ruled Spain, Austria, the Crown of Bohemia, Hungary, Slovene Lands, the Spanish Netherlands and much of Germany and Italy, were staunch defenders of the Catholic Church. Some[who?] historians believe that the era of the Reformation came to a close when Catholic France allied itself with Protestant states against the Habsburg dynasty.[citation needed]

Two main tenets of the Peace of Westphalia, which ended the Thirty Years' War, were:

  • All parties would now recognise the Peace of Augsburg of 1555, by which each prince would have the right to determine the religion of his own state, the options being Catholicism, Lutheranism, and now Calvinism (the principle of cuius regio, eius religio).
  • Christians living in principalities where their denomination was not the established church were guaranteed the right to practice their faith in public during allotted hours and in private at their will.

The treaty also effectively ended the Papacy's pan-European political power. Pope Innocent X declared the treaty "null, void, invalid, iniquitous, unjust, damnable, reprobate, inane, empty of meaning and effect for all times" in his apostolic brief Zelo Domus Dei. European sovereigns, Catholic and Protestant alike, ignored his verdict.[88]

Consequences of the Reformation

Six princes of the Holy Roman Empire and rulers of fourteen Imperial Free Cities, who issued a protest (or dissent) against the edict of the Diet of Speyer (1529), were the first individuals to be called Protestants.[89] The edict reversed concessions made to the Lutherans with the approval of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V three years earlier. The term Protestant, though initially purely political in nature, later acquired a broader sense, referring to a member of any Western church which subscribed to the main Protestant principles.[89] Today, Protestantism constitutes the second-largest form of Christianity (after Catholicism), with a total of 800 million to 1 billion adherents worldwide or about 37% of all Christians.[90][91][e] Protestants have developed their own culture, with major contributions in education, the humanities and sciences, the political and social order, the economy and the arts and many other fields.[93] The following outcomes of the Reformation regarding human capital formation, the Protestant ethic, economic development, governance, and "dark" outcomes have been identified by scholars:[37]

Human capital formation

  • Higher literacy rates.[94]
  • Lower gender gap in school enrollment and literacy rates.[95]
  • Higher primary school enrollment.[96]
  • Higher public spending on schooling and better educational performance of military conscripts.[97]
  • Higher capability in reading, numeracy, essay writing, and history.[98]

Protestant ethic

  • More hours worked.[99]
  • Divergent work attitudes of Protestant and Catholics.[100]
  • Fewer referendums on leisure, state intervention, and redistribution in Swiss cantons with more Protestants.[101]
  • Lower life satisfaction when unemployed.[102]
  • Pro-market attitudes.[103]
  • Income differences between Protestants and Catholics.[94]

Economic development

 
Katharina von Bora played a role in shaping social ethics during the Reformation.
  • Different levels of income tax revenue per capita, % of labor force in manufacturing and services, and incomes of male elementary school teachers.[94]
  • Growth of Protestant cities.[104][105]
  • Greater entrepreneurship among religious minorities in Protestant states.[106][107]
  • Different social ethics.[108]
  • Industrialization.[109]

Governance

Other outcomes

  • Witch trials became more common in regions or other jurisdictions where Protestants and Catholics contested the religious market.[122]
  • Christopher J. Probst, in his book Demonizing the Jews: Luther and the Protestant Church in Nazi Germany (2012), shows that a large number of German Protestant clergy and theologians during the Nazi Third Reich used Luther's hostile publications towards the Jews and Judaism to justify at least in part the anti-Semitic policies of the National Socialists.[123]
  • In its decree on ecumenism, the Second Vatican Council of Catholic Bishops declared that by contemporary dialogue that, while still holding views as the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church, between the churches "all are led to examine their own faithfulness to Christ's will for the Church and accordingly to undertake with vigor the task of renewal and reform" (Unitatis Redintegratio, 4).

Historiography

Margaret C. Jacob argues that there has been a dramatic shift in the historiography of the Reformation. Until the 1960s, historians focused their attention largely on the great leaders and theologians of the 16th century, especially Luther, Calvin, and Zwingli. Their ideas were studied in depth. However, the rise of the new social history in the 1960s led to looking at history from the bottom up, not from the top down. Historians began to concentrate on the values, beliefs and behavior of the people at large. She finds, "in contemporary scholarship, the Reformation is now seen as a vast cultural upheaval, a social and popular movement, textured and rich because of its diversity."[124]

Music and art

Partly due to Martin Luther's love for music, music became important in Lutheranism. The study and practice of music was encouraged in Protestant-majority countries. Songs such as the Lutheran hymns or the Calvinist Psalter became tools for the spread of Protestant ideas and beliefs, as well as identity flags. Similar attitudes developed among Catholics, who in turn encouraged the creation and use of music for religious purposes.[125]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ For an example of Reformation history in the Radical Reformation Tradition, see The Trail of Blood.
  2. ^ In the end, while the Reformation emphasis on Protestants reading the Scriptures was one factor in the development of literacy, the impact of printing itself, the wider availability of printed works at a cheaper price, and the increasing focus on education and learning as key factors in obtaining a lucrative post, were also significant contributory factors.[32]
  3. ^ In the first decade of the Reformation, Luther's message became a movement, and the output of religious pamphlets in Germany was at its height.[35]
  4. ^ See the wikipedia entry on Joanes Leizarraga, the priest who did the translation. His manuscript is considered to be a cornerstone in Basque literature, and a pioneering attempt towards Basque language standardization.
  5. ^ Most current estimates place the world's Protestant population in the range of 800 million to more than 1 billion. For example, author Hans Hillerbrand estimated a total Protestant population of 833,457,000 in 2004,[92] while a report by Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary – 961,961,000 (with inclusion of independents as defined in this article) in mid-2015.[91]

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  • Firpo, Massimo (2004). "The Italian Reformation". In Hsia, R. Po-chia (ed.). A Companion to the Reformation World. Blackwell. pp. 169–184. ISBN 978-1-4051-7865-5.
  • Jacob, Margaret C. (1991). Living the Enlightenment: Freemasonry and Politics in Eighteenth-century Europe. Oxford University Press.
  • Lockhart, Paul Douglas (2007). Denmark, 1513-1660: The Rise and Decline of a Renaissance Monarchy. Oxford University Press.
  • MacCulloch, Diarmaid (2005). The Reformation. ISBN 9780143035381.
  • Berntson, Martin (2006). "The Dissolution of the Hospitaller houses in Scandinavia". In Mol, Johannes A.; Militzer, Klaus; Nicholson, Helen J. (eds.). The Military Orders and the Reformation: Choices, State Building, and the. Hilversum Verloren. pp. 59–78.
  • Oberman, Heiko Augustinus; Walliser-Schwarzbart, Eileen (2006) [1982]. Luther: Man between God and the Devil. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10313-7.
  • Patrick, James (2007). Renaissance and Reformation. New York: Marshall Cavendish. ISBN 978-0-7614-7650-4.
  • Pettegree, Andrew (2000). The Reformation World. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-203-44527-3.
  • Pettegree, Andrew; Hall, Matthew (December 2004). "The Reformation and the Book: A Reconsideration". The Historical Journal. 47 (4): 785–808. doi:10.1017/S0018246X04003991. JSTOR 4091657. S2CID 145512622.
  • Rublack, Ulinka (2010). Dressing Up: Cultural Identity in Renaissance Europe. Oxford University Press.
  • Rubin, Jared (2014). "Printing and Protestants: An Empirical Test of the Role of Printing in the Reformation". Review of Economics and Statistics. 96 (2): 270–286. doi:10.1162/REST_a_00368. S2CID 52885129.
  • Schofield, John (2011). Martin Luther: A Concise History of His Life and Works. History Press Limited.
  • Weimer, Christoph (2004). "Luther and Cranach on Justification in Word and Image". Lutheran Quarterly. 18 (4): 387–405.
  • Whaley, Joachim (2012). Germany and the Holy Roman Empire: Volume I: Maximilian I to the Peace of Westphalia, 1493–1648 (Oxford History of Early Modern Europe). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-873101-6.
  • Yarnell III, Malcolm B. (2014). Royal Priesthood in the English Reformation. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-968625-4.

Further reading

Surveys

  • Appold, Kenneth G. The Reformation: A Brief History (2011) online
  • Collinson, Patrick. The Reformation: A History (2006)
  • Elton, Geoffrey R. and Andrew Pettegree, eds. Reformation Europe: 1517–1559 (1999) excerpt and text search
  • Elton, G.R., ed. The New Cambridge Modern History, Vol. 2: The Reformation, 1520–1559 (1st ed. 1958) online free
  • Gassmann, Günther, and Mark W. Oldenburg. Historical dictionary of Lutheranism (Scarecrow Press, 2011).
  • Hillerbrand, Hans J. The Protestant Reformation (2nd ed. 2009)
  • Hsia, R. Po-chia, ed. A Companion to the Reformation World (2006)
  • Lindberg, Carter. The European Reformations (2nd ed. 2009)
  • Mourret, Fernand. History of the Catholic Church (vol 5 1931) online free; pp. 325–516; by French Catholic scholar
  • Naphy, William G. (2007). The Protestant Revolution: From Martin Luther to Martin Luther King Jr. BBC Books. ISBN 978-0-563-53920-9.
  • Spalding, Martin (2010). The History of the Protestant Reformation; In Germany and Switzerland, and in England, Ireland, Scotland, the Netherlands, France, and Northern Europe. General Books LLC.
  • Sascha O. Becker, Steven Pfaff and Jared Rubin. Causes and Consequences of the Protestant Reformation (2015) online
  • Reeves, Michael. The Unquenchable Flame: Discovering the Heart of the Reformation (2nd ed. 2016)
  • Spitz, Lewis William (2003). The Protestant Reformation: 1517–1559.

Theology

  • Bagchi, David, and David C. Steinmetz, eds. The Cambridge Companion to Reformation Theology (2004)
  • Bainton, Roland (1952). The Reformation of the Sixteenth Century. Boston: The Beacon Press. ISBN 978-0-8070-1301-4.
  • Barrett, Matthew, and Michael Horton. Reformation Theology: A Systematic Summary (2017).
  • Braaten, Carl E. and Robert W. Jenson. The Catholicity of the Reformation. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1996. ISBN 0-8028-4220-8.
  • Cunningham, William. The Reformers and the Theology of the Reformation (2013).
  • Payton, James R., Jr. Getting the Reformation Wrong: Correcting Some Misunderstandings (IVP Academic, 2010)
  • Pelikan, Jaroslav (1984). Reformation of Church and Dogma (1300–1700). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-65377-8.

Primary sources in translation

  • Fosdick, Harry Emerson, ed. Great Voices of the Reformation [and of other putative reformers before and after it]: an Anthology, ed., with an introd. and commentaries, by Harry Emerson Fosdick. (Modern Library, 1952). xxx, 546 pp.
  • Janz, Denis, ed. A Reformation Reader: Primary Texts with Introductions (2008) excerpt and text search
  • Littlejohn, Bradford, and Jonathan Roberts eds. Reformation Theology: A Reader of Primary Sources with Introductions (2018).
  • Luther, Martin Luther's Correspondence and Other Contemporary Letters, 2 vols., tr. and ed. by Preserved Smith, Charles Michael Jacobs, The Lutheran Publication Society, Philadelphia, Pa. 1913, 1918. vol.2 (1521–1530) from Google Books. Reprint of Vol. 1, Wipf & Stock Publishers (March 2006). ISBN 1-59752-601-0.
  • Spitz, Lewis W. The Protestant Reformation: Major Documents. St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1997. ISBN 0-570-04993-8.

Historiography

  • Bates, Lucy (2010). "The Limits of Possibility in England's Long Reformation". Historical Journal. 53 (4): 1049–1070. doi:10.1017/S0018246X10000403. JSTOR 40930369. S2CID 159904890.
  • Bradshaw, Brendan (1983). "The Reformation and the Counter-Reformation". History Today. 33 (11): 42–45.
  • Brady, Thomas A. Jr. (1991). "People's Religions in Reformation Europe". The Historical Journal. 24 (1): 173–182. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00013984. JSTOR 2639713. S2CID 162991792.
  • de Boer, Wietse (2009). "An Uneasy Reunion The Catholic World in Reformation Studies". Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte. 100 (1): 366–387. doi:10.14315/arg-2009-100-1-366. S2CID 170395778.
  • Dickens, A.G.; Tonkin, John M., eds. (1985). The Reformation in Historical Thought. Harvard University Press, 443 pp. excerpt
  • Dixon, C. Scott (2012). Contesting the Reformation.
  • Fritze, Ronald H. (2005). "The English Reformation: Obedience, Destruction and Cultural Adaptation". Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 56 (1): 107–115. doi:10.1017/S0022046904002106. S2CID 162920265.
  • Haigh, Christopher (1982). "The recent historiography of the English Reformation". The Historical Journal. 25 (4): 995–1007. doi:10.1017/s0018246x00021385. JSTOR 2638647. S2CID 154848886.
  • Haigh, Christopher (1990). "The English Reformation: A Premature Birth, a Difficult Labour and a Sickly Child". The Historical Journal. 33 (2): 449–459. doi:10.1017/s0018246x0001342x. JSTOR 2639467. S2CID 162341988.
  • Haigh, Christopher (2002). "Catholicism in Early Modern England: Bossy and Beyond". The Historical Journal. 45 (2): 481–494. doi:10.1017/S0018246X02002479. JSTOR 3133654. S2CID 163117077.
  • Heininen, Simo; Czaika, Otfried (2010). "Wittenberg Influences on the Reformation in Scandinavia". European History Online. Mainz: Institute of European History. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
  • Howard, Thomas A. and Mark A. Noll, eds. Protestantism after 500 Years (Oxford UP, 2016) pp. 384.
  • Hsia, Po-Chia, ed. (2006). A Companion to the Reformation World.
  • Hsia, R. Po-chia (2004). "Reformation on the Continent: Approaches Old and New". Journal of Religious History. 28 (2): 162–170. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9809.2004.00212.x.
  • Hsia, R. Po-Chia (1987). "The Myth of the Commune: Recent Historiography on City and Reformation in Germany". Central European History. 20 (3): 203–215. doi:10.1017/s0008938900012061. JSTOR 4546103. S2CID 146309764.
  • Karant-Nunn, Susan C. (2005). "Changing One's Mind: Transformations in Reformation History from a Germanist's Perspective". Renaissance Quarterly. 58 (2): 1101–1127. doi:10.1353/ren.2008.0933. JSTOR 10.1353/ren.2008.0933. S2CID 170423375.
  • Kooi, Christine. "The Reformation in the Netherlands: Some Historiographic Contributions in English." Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 100.1 (2009): 293–307.
  • MacCulloch, Diarmaid (1995). "The Impact of the English Reformation". The Historical Journal. 38 (1): 151–153. doi:10.1017/s0018246x00016332. JSTOR 2640168. S2CID 162582384.
  • MacCulloch, Diarmaid; Laven, Mary; Duffy, Eamon (2006). "Recent Trends in the Study of Christianity in Sixteenth-Century Europe". Renaissance Quarterly. 59 (3): 697–731. doi:10.1353/ren.2008.0381. JSTOR 10.1353/ren.2008.0381.
  • Marnef, Guido (2009). "Belgian and Dutch Post-war Historiography on the Protestant and Catholic Reformation in the Netherlands". Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte. 100 (1): 271–292. doi:10.14315/arg-2009-100-1-271. S2CID 164021053.
  • Marshall, Peter (2009). "(Re)defining the English Reformation" (PDF). Journal of British Studies. 48 (3): 564–586. doi:10.1086/600128. JSTOR 27752571. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
  • Menchi, Silvana Seidel (2009). "The Age of Reformation and Counter-Reformation in Italian Historiography, 1939–2009". Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte. 100 (1): 193–217. doi:10.14315/arg-2009-100-1-193. S2CID 201096496.
  • Nieden, Marcel (2012). "The Wittenberg Reformation as a Media Event". European History Online. Mainz: Institute of European History. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
  • Scott, Tom (1991). "The Common People in the German Reformation". The Historical Journal. 24 (1): 183–192. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00013996. JSTOR 2639714. S2CID 161111542.
  • Scott, Tom (2008). "The Reformation between Deconstruction and Reconstruction: Reflections on Recent Writings on the German Reformation". German History. 26 (3): 406–422. doi:10.1093/gerhis/ghn027.
  • Walsham, Alexandra (2008). "The Reformation and 'The Disenchantment of the World' Reassessed". Historical Journal. 51 (2): 497–528. doi:10.1017/S0018246X08006808. JSTOR 20175171.
  • Walsham, Alexandra. "Toleration, Pluralism, and Coexistence: The Ambivalent Legacies of the Reformation." Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte-Archive for Reformation History 108.1 (2017): 181–190. Online
  • Wiesner-Hanks, Merry (2009). "Gender and the Reformation". Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte. 100 (1): 350–365. doi:10.14315/arg-2009-100-1-350. S2CID 192966856.

External links

  • Internet Archive of Related Texts and Documents
  • 16th Century Reformation Reading Room: Extensive online resources, Tyndale Seminary
  • The Reformation Collection From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress
  • An ecumenical official valuation by Lutherans and Catholics 500 years later
  • The Historyscoper
  • Robinson, James Harvey (1911). "Reformation, The" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). pp. 4–22.

reformation, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, reform, movement, alternatively, named, protestant, european, major, movement, within, western, christianity, 16th, century, europe, that, posed, religious, political, challenge, catholic, church, parti. For other uses see Reformation disambiguation Not to be confused with Reform movement The Reformation alternatively named the Protestant Reformation or the European Reformation 1 was a major movement within Western Christianity in 16th century Europe that posed a religious and political challenge to the Catholic Church and in particular to papal authority arising from what were perceived to be errors abuses and discrepancies by the Catholic Church The Reformation was the start of Protestantism and the split of the Western Church into Protestantism and what is now the Roman Catholic Church It is also considered to be one of the events that signified the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the early modern period in Europe 2 Martin Luther pioneer of the Reformation and Lutheran Church Prior to Martin Luther there were numerous earlier reform movements Although the Reformation is usually considered to have started with the publication of the Ninety five Theses by Martin Luther in 1517 he was not excommunicated by Pope Leo X until January 1521 The Diet of Worms of May 1521 condemned Luther and officially banned citizens of the Holy Roman Empire from defending or propagating his ideas 3 The spread of Gutenberg s printing press provided the means for the rapid dissemination of religious materials in the vernacular Luther survived after being declared an outlaw due to the protection of Elector Frederick the Wise The initial movement in Germany diversified and other reformers such as Huldrych Zwingli and John Calvin arose In general the Reformers argued that salvation in Christianity was a completed status based on faith in Jesus alone and not a process that requires good works as in the Catholic view Key events of the period include Diet of Worms 1521 formation of the Lutheran Duchy of Prussia 1525 English Reformation 1529 onwards the Council of Trent 1545 63 the Peace of Augsburg 1555 the excommunication of Elizabeth I 1570 Edict of Nantes 1598 and Peace of Westphalia 1648 The Counter Reformation also called the Catholic Reformation or the Catholic Revival was the period of Catholic reforms initiated in response to the Protestant Reformation 4 The end of the Reformation era is disputed among modern scholars Contents 1 Overview 2 History 2 1 Origins and early history 2 1 1 Earlier reform movements 2 1 2 Magisterial Reformation 2 1 3 Radical Reformation 2 1 4 Literacy 2 1 5 Causes of the Reformation 2 2 Reformation in Germany 2 3 Reformation outside Germany 2 3 1 Austria 2 3 2 Czech lands 2 3 2 1 Jan Hus 2 3 2 2 Hussite movement 2 3 3 Switzerland 2 3 3 1 Huldrych Zwingli 2 3 3 2 John Calvin 2 3 4 Nordic countries 2 3 4 1 Sweden 2 3 4 2 Finland 2 3 4 3 Denmark 2 3 4 4 Faroe Islands 2 3 4 5 Iceland 2 3 5 United Kingdom 2 3 5 1 England 2 3 5 1 1 Church of England 2 3 5 1 2 English dissenters 2 3 5 2 Wales 2 3 5 3 Scotland 2 3 6 Estonia 2 3 7 France 2 3 8 Spain 2 3 9 Portugal 2 3 10 Netherlands 2 3 11 Belgium 2 3 12 Latvia 2 3 13 Luxembourg 2 3 14 Hungary 2 3 15 Romania 2 3 16 Ukraine 2 3 17 Belarus 2 3 18 Ireland 2 3 19 Italy 2 3 20 Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 2 3 21 Moldova 2 3 22 Slovenia 2 3 23 Slovakia 2 3 24 Croatia 2 3 25 Serbia 2 3 26 Greece 2 3 27 Ottoman Empire 2 4 Spread 3 Conclusion and legacy 3 1 Thirty Years War 1618 1648 3 2 Consequences of the Reformation 3 2 1 Human capital formation 3 2 2 Protestant ethic 3 2 3 Economic development 3 2 4 Governance 3 2 5 Other outcomes 3 3 Historiography 3 4 Music and art 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 7 Further reading 7 1 Surveys 7 2 Theology 7 3 Primary sources in translation 7 4 Historiography 8 External linksOverview EditMovements had been made towards a Reformation prior to Martin Luther so some Protestants such as Landmark Baptists and the tradition of the Radical Reformation prefer to credit the start of the Reformation to reformers such as Arnold of Brescia Peter Waldo John Wycliffe Jan Hus Petr Chelcicky and Girolamo Savonarola a Due to the reform efforts of Hus and other Bohemian reformers Utraquist Hussitism was acknowledged by the Council of Basel and was officially tolerated in the Crown of Bohemia although other movements were still subject to persecution including the Lollards in England and the Waldensians in France and Italian regions citation needed Luther began by criticising the sale of indulgences insisting that the Pope had no authority over purgatory and that the Treasury of Merit had no foundation in the Bible The Reformation developed further to include a distinction between Law and Gospel a complete reliance on Scripture as the only source of proper doctrine sola scriptura and the belief that faith in Jesus is the only way to receive God s pardon for sin sola fide rather than good works Although this is generally considered a Protestant belief a similar formulation was taught by Molinist and Jansenist Catholics The priesthood of all believers downplayed the need for saints or priests to serve as mediators and mandatory clerical celibacy was ended Simul justus et peccator implied that although people could improve no one could become good enough to earn forgiveness from God Sacramental theology was simplified and attempts at imposing Aristotelian epistemology were resisted citation needed Luther and his followers did not see these theological developments as changes The 1530 Augsburg Confession concluded that in doctrine and ceremonies nothing has been received on our part against Scripture or the Church Catholic and even after the Council of Trent Martin Chemnitz published the 1565 73 Examination of the Council of Trent 5 as an attempt to prove that Trent innovated on doctrine while the Lutherans were following in the footsteps of the Church Fathers and Apostles 6 7 The initial movement in Germany diversified and other reformers arose independently of Luther such as Zwingli in Zurich and John Calvin in Geneva Depending on the country the Reformation had varying causes and different backgrounds and also unfolded differently than in Germany The spread of Gutenberg s printing press provided the means for the rapid dissemination of religious materials in the vernacular During Reformation era confessionalization Western Christianity adopted different confessions Catholic Lutheran Reformed Anglican Anabaptist Unitarian etc 8 Radical Reformers besides forming communities outside state sanction sometimes employed more extreme doctrinal change such as the rejection of the tenets of the councils of Nicaea and Chalcedon with the Unitarians of Transylvania Anabaptist movements were especially persecuted following the German Peasants War Leaders within the Roman Catholic Church responded with the Counter Reformation initiated by the Confutatio Augustana in 1530 the Council of Trent in 1545 the formation of the Jesuits in 1540 the Defensio Tridentinae fidei in 1578 and also a series of wars and expulsions of Protestants that continued until the 19th century Northern Europe with the exception of most of Ireland came under the influence of Protestantism Southern Europe remained predominantly Catholic apart from the much persecuted Waldensians Central Europe was the site of much of the Thirty Years War and there were continued expulsions of Protestants in Central Europe up to the 19th century Following World War II the removal of ethnic Germans to either East Germany or Siberia reduced Protestantism in the Warsaw Pact countries although some remain today citation needed The absence of Protestants however does not necessarily imply a failure of the Reformation Although Protestants were excommunicated and ended up worshipping in communions separate from Catholics contrary to the original intention of the Reformers they were also suppressed and persecuted in most of Europe at one point As a result some of them lived as crypto Protestants also called Nicodemites contrary to the urging of John Calvin who wanted them to live their faith openly 9 Some crypto Protestants have been identified as late as the 19th century after immigrating to Latin America 10 History EditOrigins and early history Edit See also History of Protestantism Earlier reform movements Edit See also Proto Protestantism Execution of Jan Hus in Konstanz 1415 Western Christianity was already formally compromised in the Lands of the Bohemian Crown long before Luther with the Basel Compacts 1436 and the Religious peace of Kutna Hora 1485 Utraquist Hussitism was allowed there alongside the Roman Catholic confession By the time the Reformation arrived the Kingdom of Bohemia and the Margraviate of Moravia both had majority Hussite populations for decades now John Wycliffe questioned the privileged status of the clergy which had bolstered their powerful role in England and the luxury and pomp of local parishes and their ceremonies 11 He was accordingly characterised as the evening star of scholasticism and as the morning star or stella matutina of the English Reformation 12 In 1374 Catherine of Siena began travelling with her followers throughout northern and central Italy advocating reform of the clergy and advising people that repentance and renewal could be done through the total love for God 13 She carried on a long correspondence with Pope Gregory XI asking him to reform the clergy and the administration of the Papal States The oldest Protestant churches such as the Moravian Church date their origins to Jan Hus John Huss in the early 15th century As it was led by a Bohemian noble majority and recognised for some time by the Basel Compacts the Hussite Reformation was Europe s first Magisterial Reformation because the ruling magistrates supported it unlike the Radical Reformation which the state did not support Common factors that played a role during the Reformation and the Counter Reformation included the rise of the printing press nationalism simony the appointment of Cardinal nephews and other corruption of the Roman Curia and other ecclesiastical hierarchy the impact of humanism the new learning of the Renaissance versus scholasticism and the Western Schism that eroded loyalty to the Papacy Unrest due to the Great Schism of Western Christianity 1378 1416 excited wars between princes uprisings among the peasants and widespread concern over corruption in the Church especially from John Wycliffe at Oxford University and from Jan Hus at the Charles University in Prague citation needed Hus objected to some of the practices of the Roman Catholic Church and wanted to return the church in Bohemia and Moravia to earlier practices liturgy in the language of the people i e Czech having lay people receive communion in both kinds bread and wine that is in Latin communio sub utraque specie married priests and eliminating indulgences and the concept of purgatory Some of these like the use of local language as the liturgical language were approved by the pope as early as in the 9th century 14 The leaders of the Roman Catholic Church condemned him at the Council of Constance 1414 1417 and he was burnt at the stake despite a promise of safe conduct 15 Wycliffe was posthumously condemned as a heretic and his corpse exhumed and burned in 1428 16 The Council of Constance confirmed and strengthened the traditional medieval conception of church and empire The council did not address the national tensions or the theological tensions stirred up during the previous century and could not prevent schism and the Hussite Wars in Bohemia 17 better source needed Pope Sixtus IV 1471 1484 established the practice of selling indulgences to be applied to the dead thereby establishing a new stream of revenue with agents across Europe 18 Pope Alexander VI 1492 1503 was one of the most controversial of the Renaissance popes He was the father of seven children including Lucrezia and Cesare Borgia 19 better source needed In response to papal corruption particularly the sale of indulgences Luther wrote The Ninety Five Theses 20 better source needed A number of theologians in the Holy Roman Empire preached reformation ideas in the 1510s shortly before or simultaneously with Luther including Christoph Schappeler in Memmingen as early as 1513 Magisterial Reformation Edit Main articles Magisterial Reformation Martin Luther and History of Lutheranism The start of the Reformation Martin Luther posted the Ninety five Theses in 1517 Martin Luther at the Diet of Worms where he refused to recant his works when asked to by Charles V painting from Anton von Werner 1877 Staatsgalerie Stuttgart The Reformation is usually dated to 31 October 1517 in Wittenberg Saxony when Luther sent his Ninety Five Theses on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences to the Archbishop of Mainz The theses debated and criticised the Church and the papacy but concentrated upon the selling of indulgences and doctrinal policies about purgatory particular judgment and the authority of the pope He would later in the period 1517 1521 write works on devotion to Virgin Mary the intercession of and devotion to the saints the sacraments mandatory clerical celibacy and later on the authority of the pope the ecclesiastical law censure and excommunication the role of secular rulers in religious matters the relationship between Christianity and the law good works and monasticism 21 Some nuns such as Katharina von Bora and Ursula of Munsterberg left the monastic life when they accepted the Reformation but other orders adopted the Reformation as Lutherans continue to have monasteries today In contrast Reformed areas typically secularised monastic property citation needed Reformers and their opponents made heavy use of inexpensive pamphlets as well as vernacular Bibles using the relatively new printing press so there was swift movement of both ideas and documents 22 23 Magdalena Heymair printed pedagogical writings for teaching children Bible stories Parallel to events in Germany a movement began in Switzerland under the leadership of Huldrych Zwingli These two movements quickly agreed on most issues but some unresolved differences kept them separate Some followers of Zwingli believed that the Reformation was too conservative and moved independently toward more radical positions some of which survive among modern day Anabaptists After this first stage of the Reformation following the excommunication of Luther in Decet Romanum Pontificem and the condemnation of his followers by the edicts of the 1521 Diet of Worms the work and writings of John Calvin were influential in establishing a loose consensus among various churches in Switzerland Scotland Hungary Germany and elsewhere Although the German Peasants War of 1524 1525 began as a tax and anti corruption protest as reflected in the Twelve Articles its leader Thomas Muntzer gave it a radical Reformation character It swept through the Bavarian Thuringian and Swabian principalities including the Black Company of Florian Geier a knight from Giebelstadt who joined the peasants in the general outrage against the Catholic hierarchy 24 In response to reports about the destruction and violence Luther condemned the revolt in writings such as Against the Murderous Thieving Hordes of Peasants Zwingli and Luther s ally Philipp Melanchthon also did not condone the uprising 25 26 Some 100 000 peasants were killed by the end of the war 27 Radical Reformation Edit Main article Radical Reformation The Radical Reformation was the response to what was believed to be the corruption in both the Roman Catholic Church and the Magisterial Reformation Beginning in Germany and Switzerland in the 16th century the Radical Reformation developed radical Protestant churches throughout Europe The term includes Thomas Muntzer Andreas Karlstadt the Zwickau prophets and Anabaptists like the Hutterites and Mennonites In parts of Germany Switzerland and Austria a majority sympathised with the Radical Reformation despite intense persecution 28 Although the surviving proportion of the European population that rebelled against Catholic Lutheran and Zwinglian churches was small Radical Reformers wrote profusely and the literature on the Radical Reformation is disproportionately large partly as a result of the proliferation of the Radical Reformation teachings in the United States 29 Despite significant diversity among the early Radical Reformers some repeating patterns emerged among many Anabaptist groups Many of these patterns were enshrined in the Schleitheim Confession 1527 and include believers or adult baptism memorial view of the Lord s Supper belief that Scripture is the final authority on matters of faith and practice emphasis on the New Testament and the Sermon on the Mount interpretation of Scripture in community separation from the world and a two kingdom theology pacifism and nonresistance communal ownership and economic sharing belief in the freedom of the will non swearing of oaths yieldedness Gelassenheit to one s community and to God the ban i e shunning salvation through divinization Vergottung and ethical living and discipleship Nachfolge Christi 30 Literacy Edit Martin Luther s 1534 Bible translated into German Luther s translation influenced the development of the current Standard German The Reformation was a triumph of literacy and the new printing press 31 b 22 33 Luther s translation of the Bible into German was a decisive moment in the spread of literacy and stimulated as well the printing and distribution of religious books and pamphlets From 1517 onward religious pamphlets flooded Germany and much of Europe 34 c By 1530 over 10 000 publications are known with a total of ten million copies The Reformation was thus a media revolution Luther strengthened his attacks on Rome by depicting a good against bad church From there it became clear that print could be used for propaganda in the Reformation for particular agendas although the term propaganda derives from the Catholic Congregatio de Propaganda Fide Congregation for Propagating the Faith from the Counter Reformation Reform writers used existing styles cliches and stereotypes which they adapted as needed 34 Especially effective were writings in German including Luther s translation of the Bible his Smaller Catechism for parents teaching their children and his Larger Catechism for pastors Using the German vernacular they expressed the Apostles Creed in simpler more personal Trinitarian language Illustrations in the German Bible and in many tracts popularised Luther s ideas Lucas Cranach the Elder 1472 1553 the great painter patronised by the electors of Wittenberg was a close friend of Luther and he illustrated Luther s theology for a popular audience He dramatised Luther s views on the relationship between the Old and New Testaments while remaining mindful of Luther s careful distinctions about proper and improper uses of visual imagery 36 Causes of the Reformation Edit Erasmus was a Catholic priest who inspired some of the Protestant reformers The following supply side factors have been identified as causes of the Reformation 37 The presence of a printing press in a city by 1500 made Protestant adoption by 1600 far more likely 22 Protestant literature was produced at greater levels in cities where media markets were more competitive making these cities more likely to adopt Protestantism 33 Ottoman incursions decreased conflicts between Protestants and Catholics helping the Reformation take root 38 Greater political autonomy increased the likelihood that Protestantism would be adopted 22 39 Where Protestant reformers enjoyed princely patronage they were much more likely to succeed 40 Proximity to neighbours who adopted Protestantism increased the likelihood of adopting Protestantism 39 Cities that had higher numbers of students enrolled in heterodox universities and lower numbers enrolled in orthodox universities were more likely to adopt Protestantism 40 The following demand side factors have been identified as causes of the Reformation 37 Cities with strong cults of saints were less likely to adopt Protestantism 41 Cities where primogeniture was practised were less likely to adopt Protestantism 42 Regions that were poor but had great economic potential and bad political institutions were more likely to adopt Protestantism 43 The presence of bishoprics made the adoption of Protestantism less likely 22 The presence of monasteries made the adoption of Protestantism less likely 43 A 2020 study linked the spread of Protestantism to personal ties to Luther e g letter correspondents visits former students and trade routes 44 Reformation in Germany Edit Main article Martin Luther This section may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in German June 2018 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 9 729 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Reformation see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated de Reformation to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2018 Political situation in Germany about 1560 Religious situation in Germany and Europe about 1560 In 1517 Luther nailed the Ninety five theses to the Castle Church door and without his knowledge or prior approval they were copied and printed across Germany and internationally Different reformers arose more or less independently of Luther in 1518 for example Andreas Karlstadt Philip Melanchthon Erhard Schnepf Johannes Brenz and Martin Bucer and in 1519 for example Huldrych Zwingli Nikolaus von Amsdorf Ulrich von Hutten and so on After the Heidelberg Disputation 1518 where Luther described the Theology of the Cross as opposed to the Theology of Glory and the Leipzig Disputation 1519 the faith issues were brought to the attention of other German theologians throughout the Empire Each year drew new theologians to embrace the Reformation and participate in the ongoing European wide discussion about faith The pace of the Reformation proved unstoppable by 1520 The early Reformation in Germany mostly concerns the life of Martin Luther until he was excommunicated by Pope Leo X on 3 January 1521 in the bull Decet Romanum Pontificem 45 The exact moment Martin Luther realised the key doctrine of Justification by Faith is described in German as the Turmerlebnis In Table Talk Luther describes it as a sudden realization Experts often speak of a gradual process of realization between 1514 and 1518 Reformation ideas and Protestant church services were first introduced in cities being supported by local citizens and also some nobles The Reformation did not receive overt state support until 1525 although it was only due to the protection of Elector Frederick the Wise who had a strange dream 46 the night prior to 31 October 1517 that Luther survived after being declared an outlaw in hiding at Wartburg Castle and then returning to Wittenberg It was more of a movement among the German people between 1517 and 1525 and then also a political one beginning in 1525 Reformer Adolf Clarenbach was burned at the stake near Cologne in 1529 The first state to formally adopt a Protestant confession was the Duchy of Prussia 1525 Albert Duke of Prussia formally declared the Evangelical faith to be the state religion Catholics labeled self identified Evangelicals Lutherans to discredit them after the practice of naming a heresy after its founder However the Lutheran Church traditionally sees itself as the main trunk of the historical Christian Tree founded by Christ and the Apostles holding that during the Reformation the Church of Rome fell away 47 48 Ducal Prussia was followed by many imperial free cities and other minor imperial entities The next sizable territories were the Landgraviate of Hesse 1526 at the Synod of Homberg and the Electorate of Saxony 1527 Luther s homeland Electoral Palatinate 1530s and the Duchy of Wurttemberg 1534 For a more complete list see the list of states by the date of adoption of the Reformation and the table of the adoption years for the Augsburg Confession The reformation wave swept first the Holy Roman Empire and then extended beyond it to the rest of the European continent citation needed Germany was home to the greatest number of Protestant reformers Each state which turned Protestant had their own reformers who contributed towards the Evangelical faith In Electoral Saxony the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Saxony was organised and served as an example for other states although Luther was not dogmatic on questions of polity Reformation outside Germany Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2017 The Reformation also spread widely throughout Europe starting with Bohemia in the Czech lands and over the next few decades to other countries Austria Edit See also History of Austria Austria in the Reformation and Counter Reformation 1517 1564 Austria followed the same pattern as the German speaking states within the Holy Roman Empire and Lutheranism became the main Protestant confession among its population Lutheranism gained a significant following in the eastern half of present day Austria while Calvinism was less successful Eventually the expulsions of the Counter Reformation reversed the trend Czech lands Edit Main article Bohemian Reformation The Hussites were a Christian movement in the Kingdom of Bohemia following the teachings of Czech reformer Jan Hus Jan Hus Edit Main article Jan Hus Czech reformer and university professor Jan Hus c 1369 1415 became the best known representative of the Bohemian Reformation and one of the forerunners of the Protestant Reformation Jan Hus was declared a heretic and executed burned at stake at the Council of Constance in 1415 where he arrived voluntarily to defend his teachings Hussite movement Edit Main article Hussites Jiri Tranovsky 1592 1637 the Luther of the Slavs who was active in Bohemia Moravia Poland and Slovakia Upper Hungary This predominantly religious movement was propelled by social issues and strengthened Czech national awareness In 1417 two years after the execution of Jan Hus the Czech reformation quickly became the chief force in the country Hussites made up the vast majority of the population forcing the Council of Basel to recognize in 1437 a system of two religions for the first time signing the Compacts of Basel for the kingdom Catholic and Czech Ultraquism a Hussite movement Bohemia later also elected two Protestant kings George of Podebrady Frederick of Palatine After Habsburgs took control of the region the Hussite churches were prohibited and the kingdom partially recatholicised Even later Lutheranism gained a substantial following after being permitted by the Habsburgs with the continued persecution of the Czech native Hussite churches Many Hussites thus declared themselves Lutherans Two churches with Hussite roots are now the second and third biggest churches among the largely agnostic peoples Czech Brethren which gave origin to the international church known as the Moravian Church and the Czechoslovak Hussite Church Switzerland Edit Main article Reformation in Switzerland In Switzerland the teachings of the reformers and especially those of Zwingli and Calvin had a profound effect despite frequent quarrels between the different branches of the Reformation Huldrych Zwingli Edit Main articles Huldrych Zwingli and Reformation in Zurich Huldrych Zwingli launched the Reformation in Switzerland Portrait by Hans Asper Parallel to events in Germany a movement began in the Swiss Confederation under the leadership of Huldrych Zwingli Zwingli was a scholar and preacher who moved to Zurich the then leading city state in 1518 a year after Martin Luther began the Reformation in Germany with his Ninety five Theses Although the two movements agreed on many issues of theology as the recently introduced printing press spread ideas rapidly from place to place some unresolved differences kept them separate Long standing resentment between the German states and the Swiss Confederation led to heated debate over how much Zwingli owed his ideas to Lutheranism Although Zwinglianism does hold uncanny resemblance to Lutheranism it even had its own equivalent of the Ninety five Theses called the 67 Conclusions historians have been unable to prove that Zwingli had any contact with Luther s publications before 1520 and Zwingli himself maintained that he had prevented himself from reading them The German Prince Philip of Hesse saw potential in creating an alliance between Zwingli and Luther seeing strength in a united Protestant front A meeting was held in his castle in 1529 now known as the Colloquy of Marburg which has become infamous for its complete failure The two men could not come to any agreement due to their disputation over one key doctrine Although Luther preached consubstantiation in the Eucharist over transubstantiation he believed in the real presence of Christ in the Communion bread Zwingli inspired by Dutch theologian Cornelius Hoen believed that the Communion bread was only representative and memorial Christ was not present 49 Luther became so angry that he famously carved into the meeting table in chalk Hoc Est Corpus Meum a Biblical quotation from the Last Supper meaning This is my body Zwingli countered this saying that est in that context was the equivalent of the word significat signifies 50 Some followers of Zwingli believed that the Reformation was too conservative and moved independently toward more radical positions some of which survive among modern day Anabaptists One famous incident illustrating this was when radical Zwinglians fried and ate sausages during Lent in Zurich city square by way of protest against the Church teaching of good works Other Protestant movements grew up along the lines of mysticism or humanism cf Erasmus and Louis de Berquin who was martyred in 1529 sometimes breaking from Rome or from the Protestants or forming outside of the churches John Calvin Edit Main articles John Calvin and Republic of Geneva John Calvin was one of the leading figures of the Reformation His legacy remains in a variety of churches Following the excommunication of Luther and condemnation of the Reformation by the Pope the work and writings of John Calvin were influential in establishing a loose consensus among various churches in Switzerland Scotland Hungary Germany and elsewhere After the expulsion of its Bishop in 1526 and the unsuccessful attempts of the Berne reformer Guillaume William Farel Calvin was asked to use the organisational skill he had gathered as a student of law to discipline the fallen city of Geneva His Ordinances of 1541 involved a collaboration of Church affairs with the City council and consistory to bring morality to all areas of life After the establishment of the Geneva academy in 1559 Geneva became the unofficial capital of the Protestant movement providing refuge for Protestant exiles from all over Europe and educating them as Calvinist missionaries These missionaries dispersed Calvinism widely and formed the French Huguenots in Calvin s own lifetime and spread to Scotland under the leadership of John Knox in 1560 Anne Locke translated some of Calvin s writings to English around this time The faith continued to spread after Calvin s death in 1563 and reached as far as Constantinople by the start of the 17th century citation needed The Reformation foundations engaged with Augustinianism Both Luther and Calvin thought along lines linked with the theological teachings of Augustine of Hippo The Augustinianism of the Reformers struggled against Pelagianism a heresy that they perceived in the Catholic Church of their day Ultimately since Calvin and Luther disagreed strongly on certain matters of theology such as double predestination and Holy Communion the relationship between Lutherans and Calvinists was one of conflict Nordic countries Edit See also Reformation in Denmark Norway and Holstein Religion in Iceland The Reformation Religion in Norway From Reformation to 1964 and Religion in Sweden Lutheran Reformation The seal of the Diocese of Turku Finland during the 16th and 17th centuries featured the finger of St Henry The post Reformation diocese included the relic of a pre Reformation saint in its seal All of Scandinavia ultimately adopted Lutheranism over the course of the 16th century as the monarchs of Denmark who also ruled Norway and Iceland and Sweden who also ruled Finland converted to that faith Sweden Edit Main article Reformation in Sweden In Sweden the Reformation was spearheaded by Gustav Vasa elected king in 1523 with major contributions by Olaus Petri a Swedish clergyman Friction with the pope over the latter s interference in Swedish ecclesiastical affairs led to the discontinuance of any official connection between Sweden and the papacy since 1523 Four years later at the Diet of Vasteras the king succeeded in forcing the diet to accept his dominion over the national church The king was given possession of all church property church appointments required royal approval the clergy were subject to the civil law and the pure Word of God was to be preached in the churches and taught in the schools effectively granting official sanction to Lutheran ideas The apostolic succession was retained in Sweden during the Reformation The adoption of Lutheranism was also one of the main reasons for the eruption of the Dacke War a peasants uprising in Smaland Finland Edit Main article Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland Part of the Church of Sweden This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2021 Denmark Edit Under the reign of Frederick I 1523 33 Denmark remained officially Catholic 51 Frederick initially pledged to persecute Lutherans 52 yet he quickly adopted a policy of protecting Lutheran preachers and reformers of whom the most famous was Hans Tausen 51 During his reign Lutheranism made significant inroads among the Danish population 51 In 1526 Frederick forbade papal investiture of bishops in Denmark and in 1527 ordered fees from new bishops be paid to the crown making Frederick the head of the church of Denmark 51 Frederick s son Christian was openly Lutheran which prevented his election to the throne upon his father s death In 1536 following his victory in the Count s War he became king as Christian III and continued the Reformation of the state church with assistance from Johannes Bugenhagen By the Copenhagen recess of October 1536 the authority of the Catholic bishops was terminated 53 Faroe Islands Edit Main article History of the Faroe Islands Reformation era This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2021 Iceland Edit Main article Icelandic Reformation Luther s influence had already reached Iceland before King Christian s decree The Germans fished near Iceland s coast and the Hanseatic League engaged in commerce with the Icelanders These Germans raised a Lutheran church in Hafnarfjordur as early as 1533 Through German trade connections many young Icelanders studied in Hamburg 54 In 1538 when the kingly decree of the new Church ordinance reached Iceland bishop Ogmundur and his clergy denounced it threatening excommunication for anyone subscribing to the German heresy 55 In 1539 the King sent a new governor to Iceland Klaus von Mervitz with a mandate to introduce reform and take possession of church property 55 Von Mervitz seized a monastery in Videy with the help of his sheriff Dietrich of Minden and his soldiers They drove the monks out and seized all their possessions for which they were promptly excommunicated by Ogmundur United Kingdom Edit Main articles English Reformation and List of Protestant martyrs of the English Reformation England Edit Church of England Edit Main articles Church of England and Anglicanism Henry VIII broke England s ties with the Roman Catholic Church becoming the sole head of the English Church The separation of the Church of England from Rome under Henry VIII beginning in 1529 and completed in 1537 brought England alongside this broad Reformation movement Although Robert Barnes attempted to get Henry VIII to adopt Lutheran theology he refused to do so in 1538 and burned him at the stake in 1540 Reformers in the Church of England alternated for decades between sympathies between Catholic tradition and Reformed principles gradually developing within the context of robustly Protestant doctrine a tradition considered a middle way via media between the Catholic and Protestant traditions citation needed The English Reformation followed a different course from the Reformation in continental Europe There had long been a strong strain of anti clericalism England had already given rise to the Lollard movement of John Wycliffe which played an important part in inspiring the Hussites in Bohemia Lollardy was suppressed and became an underground movement so the extent of its influence in the 1520s is difficult to assess The different character of the English Reformation came rather from the fact that it was driven initially by the political necessities of Henry VIII Henry had once been a sincere Catholic and had even authored a book strongly criticising Luther His wife Catherine of Aragon bore him only a single child who survived infancy Mary Henry strongly wanted a male heir and many of his subjects might have agreed if only because they wanted to avoid another dynastic conflict like the Wars of the Roses citation needed Thomas Cranmer proved essential in the development of the English Reformation Refused an annulment of his marriage to Catherine King Henry decided to remove the Church of England from the authority of Rome 56 In 1534 the Act of Supremacy recognised Henry as the only Supreme Head on earth of the Church of England 57 Between 1535 and 1540 under Thomas Cromwell the policy known as the Dissolution of the Monasteries was put into effect The veneration of some saints certain pilgrimages and some pilgrim shrines were also attacked Huge amounts of church land and property passed into the hands of the Crown and ultimately into those of the nobility and gentry The vested interest thus created made for a powerful force in support of the dissolution citation needed There were some notable opponents to the Henrician Reformation such as Thomas More and Cardinal John Fisher who were executed for their opposition There was also a growing party of reformers who were imbued with the Calvinistic Lutheran and Zwinglian doctrines then current on the Continent When Henry died he was succeeded by his Protestant son Edward VI who through his empowered councillors with the King being only nine years old at his succession and fifteen at his death the Duke of Somerset and the Duke of Northumberland ordered the destruction of images in churches and the closing of the chantries Under Edward VI the Church of England moved closer to continental Protestantism Yet at a popular level religion in England was still in a state of flux Following a brief Catholic restoration during the reign of Mary 1553 1558 a loose consensus developed during the reign of Elizabeth I though this point is one of considerable debate among historians This Elizabethan Religious Settlement largely formed Anglicanism into a distinctive church tradition The compromise was uneasy and was capable of veering between extreme Calvinism on one hand and Catholicism on the other But compared to the bloody and chaotic state of affairs in contemporary France it was relatively successful in part because Queen Elizabeth lived so long until the Puritan Revolution or English Civil War in the seventeenth century citation needed English dissenters Edit Main articles Puritanism English Dissenters Independent religion Nonconformism English Presbyterianism Ecclesiastical separatism and 17th century denominations in England Oliver Cromwell was a devout Puritan and military leader who became Lord Protector of England Scotland and Ireland The success of the Counter Reformation on the Continent and the growth of a Puritan party dedicated to further Protestant reform polarised the Elizabethan Age although it was not until the 1640s that England underwent religious strife comparable to what its neighbours had suffered some generations before The early Puritan movement late 16th 17th centuries was Reformed or Calvinist and was a movement for reform in the Church of England Its origins lay in the discontent with the Elizabethan Religious Settlement The desire was for the Church of England to resemble more closely the Protestant churches of Europe especially Geneva The Puritans objected to ornaments and ritual in the churches as idolatrous vestments surplices organs genuflection calling the vestments popish pomp and rags see Vestments controversy They also objected to ecclesiastical courts Their refusal to endorse completely all of the ritual directions and formulas of the Book of Common Prayer and the imposition of its liturgical order by legal force and inspection sharpened Puritanism into a definite opposition movement citation needed The later Puritan movement often referred to as dissenters and nonconformists eventually led to the formation of various Reformed denominations The most famous emigration to America was the migration of Puritan separatists from the Anglican Church of England They fled first to Holland and then later to America to establish the English colony of Massachusetts in New England which later became one of the original United States These Puritan separatists were also known as the Pilgrims After establishing a colony at Plymouth which became part of the colony of Massachusetts in 1620 the Puritan pilgrims received a charter from the King of England that legitimised their colony allowing them to do trade and commerce with merchants in England in accordance with the principles of mercantilism The Puritans persecuted those of other religious faiths 58 for example Anne Hutchinson was banished to Rhode Island during the Antinomian Controversy and Quaker Mary Dyer was hanged in Boston for repeatedly defying a Puritan law banning Quakers from the colony 59 She was one of the four executed Quakers known as the Boston martyrs Executions ceased in 1661 when King Charles II explicitly forbade Massachusetts from executing anyone for professing Quakerism 60 In 1647 Massachusetts passed a law prohibiting any Jesuit Roman Catholic priests from entering territory under Puritan jurisdiction 61 Any suspected person who could not clear himself was to be banished from the colony a second offence carried a death penalty 62 The Pilgrims held radical Protestant disapproval of Christmas and its celebration was outlawed in Boston from 1659 to 1681 63 The ban was revoked in 1681 by the English appointed governor Edmund Andros who also revoked a Puritan ban on festivities on Saturday nights 63 Nevertheless it was not until the mid 19th century that celebrating Christmas became fashionable in the Boston region 64 Wales Edit Further information History of Wales Early modern period Bishop Richard Davies and dissident Protestant cleric John Penry introduced Calvinist theology to Wales In 1588 the Bishop of Llandaff published the entire Bible in the Welsh language The translation had a significant impact upon the Welsh population and helped to firmly establish Protestantism among the Welsh people 65 The Welsh Protestants used the model of the Synod of Dort of 1618 1619 Calvinism developed through the Puritan period following the restoration of the monarchy under Charles II and within Wales Calvinistic Methodist movement However few copies of Calvin s writings were available before mid 19th century 66 Scotland Edit Main articles Scottish Reformation Church of Scotland and Presbyterianism John Knox was a leading figure in the Scottish Reformation The Reformation in Scotland s case culminated ecclesiastically in the establishment of a church along reformed lines and politically in the triumph of English influence over that of France John Knox is regarded as the leader of the Scottish reformation The Reformation Parliament of 1560 repudiated the pope s authority by the Papal Jurisdiction Act 1560 forbade the celebration of the Mass and approved a Protestant Confession of Faith It was made possible by a revolution against French hegemony under the regime of the regent Mary of Guise who had governed Scotland in the name of her absent daughter Mary Queen of Scots then also Queen of France Although Protestantism triumphed relatively easily in Scotland the exact form of Protestantism remained to be determined The 17th century saw a complex struggle between Presbyterianism particularly the Covenanters and Episcopalianism The Presbyterians eventually won control of the Church of Scotland which went on to have an important influence on Presbyterian churches worldwide but Scotland retained a relatively large Episcopalian minority 67 Estonia Edit Main article History of Estonia The Reformation This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2021 France Edit Main articles Massacre of Merindol Huguenot Reformed Church of France and French Wars of Religion Although a Catholic clergyman himself Cardinal Richelieu allied France with Protestant states Besides the Waldensians already present in France Protestantism also spread in from German lands where the Protestants were nicknamed Huguenots this eventually led to decades of civil warfare Though not personally interested in religious reform Francis I reigned 1515 1547 initially maintained an attitude of tolerance in accordance with his interest in the humanist movement This changed in 1534 with the Affair of the Placards In this act Protestants denounced the Catholic Mass in placards that appeared across France even reaching the royal apartments During this time as the issue of religious faith entered into the arena of politics Francis came to view the movement as a threat to the kingdom s stability Following the Affair of the Placards culprits were rounded up at least a dozen heretics were put to death and the persecution of Protestants increased 68 One of those who fled France at that time was John Calvin who emigrated to Basel in 1535 before eventually settling in Geneva in 1536 Beyond the reach of the French kings in Geneva Calvin continued to take an interest in the religious affairs of his native land including the training of ministers for congregations in France As the number of Protestants in France increased the number of heretics in prisons awaiting trial also grew As an experimental approach to reduce the caseload in Normandy a special court just for the trial of heretics was established in 1545 in the Parlement de Rouen 69 70 When Henry II took the throne in 1547 the persecution of Protestants grew and special courts for the trial of heretics were also established in the Parlement de Paris These courts came to known as La Chambre Ardente the fiery chamber because of their reputation of meting out death penalties on burning gallows 71 Despite heavy persecution by Henry II the Reformed Church of France largely Calvinist in direction made steady progress across large sections of the nation in the urban bourgeoisie and parts of the aristocracy appealing to people alienated by the obduracy and the complacency of the Catholic establishment Saint Bartholomew s Day massacre painting by Francois Dubois French Protestantism though its appeal increased under persecution came to acquire a distinctly political character made all the more obvious by the conversions of nobles during the 1550s This established the preconditions for a series of destructive and intermittent conflicts known as the Wars of Religion The civil wars gained impetus with the sudden death of Henry II in 1559 which began a prolonged period of weakness for the French crown Atrocity and outrage became the defining characteristics of the time illustrated at their most intense in the St Bartholomew s Day massacre of August 1572 when the Catholic party killed between 30 000 and 100 000 Huguenots across France The wars only concluded when Henry IV himself a former Huguenot issued the Edict of Nantes 1598 promising official toleration of the Protestant minority but under highly restricted conditions Catholicism remained the official state religion and the fortunes of French Protestants gradually declined over the next century culminating in Louis XIV s Edict of Fontainebleau 1685 which revoked the Edict of Nantes and made Catholicism the sole legal religion of France leading some Huguenots to live as Nicodemites 72 In response to the Edict of Fontainebleau Frederick William I Elector of Brandenburg declared the Edict of Potsdam October 1685 giving free passage to Huguenot refugees and tax free status to them for ten years In the late 17th century 150 000 200 000 Huguenots fled to England the Netherlands Prussia Switzerland and the English and Dutch overseas colonies 73 A significant community in France remained in the Cevennes region A separate Protestant community of the Lutheran faith existed in the newly conquered province of Alsace its status not affected by the Edict of Fontainebleau Spain Edit Main articles History of Spain Phillip II and the wars of religion and Protestantism in Spain The New Testament translated by Enzinas published in Antwerp 1543 The New Testament translated by Joanes Leizarraga into the Basque language 1571 on the orders of Navarre s Calvinist queen Jeanne III of Navarre In the early 16th century Spain had a different political and cultural milieu from its Western and Central European neighbours in several respects which affected the mentality and the reaction of the nation towards the Reformation Spain which had only recently managed to complete the reconquest of the Peninsula from the Moors in 1492 had been preoccupied with converting the Muslim and Jewish populations of the newly conquered regions through the establishment of the Spanish Inquisition in 1478 The rulers of the nation stressed political cultural and religious unity and by the time of the Lutheran Reformation the Spanish Inquisition was already 40 years old and had the capability of quickly persecuting any new movement that the leaders of the Catholic Church perceived or interpreted to be religious heterodoxy 74 Charles V did not wish to see Spain or the rest of Habsburg Europe divided and in light of continual threat from the Ottomans preferred to see the Roman Catholic Church reform itself from within This led to a Counter Reformation in Spain in the 1530s During the 1520s the Spanish Inquisition had created an atmosphere of suspicion and sought to root out any religious thought seen as suspicious As early as 1521 the Pope had written a letter to the Spanish monarchy warning against allowing the unrest in Northern Europe to be replicated in Spain Between 1520 and 1550 printing presses in Spain were tightly controlled and any books of Protestant teaching were prohibited Contemporary illustration of the auto da fe of Valladolid in which fourteen Protestants were burned at the stake for their faith on 21 May 1559 Between 1530 and 1540 Protestantism in Spain was still able to gain followers clandestinely and in cities such as Seville and Valladolid adherents would secretly meet at private houses to pray and study the Bible 75 Protestants in Spain were estimated at between 1000 and 3000 mainly among intellectuals who had seen writings such as those of Erasmus Notable reformers included Dr Juan Gil and Juan Perez de Pineda who subsequently fled and worked alongside others such as Francisco de Enzinas to translate the Greek New Testament into the Spanish language a task completed by 1556 Protestant teachings were smuggled into Spain by Spaniards such as Julian Hernandez who in 1557 was condemned by the Inquisition and burnt at the stake Under Philip II conservatives in the Spanish church tightened their grip and those who refused to recant such as Rodrigo de Valer were condemned to life imprisonment In May 1559 sixteen Spanish Lutherans were burnt at the stake fourteen were strangled before being burnt while two were burnt alive In October another thirty were executed Spanish Protestants who were able to flee the country were to be found in at least a dozen cities in Europe such as Geneva where some of them embraced Calvinist teachings Those who fled to England were given support by the Church of England citation needed The Kingdom of Navarre although by the time of the Protestant Reformation a minor principality territoriality restricted to southern France had French Huguenot monarchs including Henry IV of France and his mother Jeanne III of Navarre a devout Calvinist Upon the arrival of the Protestant Reformation Calvinism reached some Basques through the translation of the Bible into the Basque language by Joanes Leizarraga As Queen of Navarre Jeanne III commissioned the translation of the New Testament into Basque d and Bearnese for the benefit of her subjects Molinism presented a soteriology similar to Protestants within the Roman Catholic Church Portugal Edit Main article Protestantism in Portugal During the Reformation era Protestantism was unsuccessful in Portugal as its spread was frustrated for similar reasons to those in Spain Netherlands Edit Main article History of religion in the Netherlands Anabaptist Dirk Willems rescues his pursuer and is subsequently burned at the stake in 1569 The Reformation in the Netherlands unlike in many other countries was not initiated by the rulers of the Seventeen Provinces but instead by multiple popular movements which in turn were bolstered by the arrival of Protestant refugees from other parts of the continent While the Anabaptist movement enjoyed popularity in the region in the early decades of the Reformation Calvinism in the form of the Dutch Reformed Church became the dominant Protestant faith in the country from the 1560s onward In the early 17th century internal theological conflict within the Calvinist church between two tendencies of Calvinism the Gomarists and the liberal Arminians or Remonstrants resulted in Gomarist Calvinism becoming the de facto state religion Belgium Edit The first two Lutheran martyrs were monks from Antwerp Johann Esch and Heinrich Hoes who were burned at the stake when they would not recant Harsh persecution of Protestants by the Spanish government of Philip II contributed to a desire for independence in the provinces which led to the Eighty Years War and eventually the separation of the largely Protestant Dutch Republic from the Catholic dominated Southern Netherlands present day Belgium In 1566 at the peak of Belgian Reformation there were an estimated 300 000 Protestants or 20 of the Belgian population 76 Latvia Edit Main article History of Latvia German period 1185 1561 This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2021 Luxembourg Edit Main article Protestantism in Luxembourg Luxembourg a part of the Spanish Netherlands remained Catholic during the Reformation era because Protestantism was illegal until 1768 Hungary Edit Main article Reformation in the Kingdom of Hungary Stephen Bocskay prevented the Holy Roman Emperor from imposing Catholicism on Hungarians Much of the population of the Kingdom of Hungary adopted Protestantism during the 16th century After the 1526 Battle of Mohacs the Hungarian people were disillusioned by the inability of the government to protect them and turned to the faith they felt would infuse them with the strength necessary to resist the invader They found this in the teaching of Protestant reformers such as Martin Luther The spread of Protestantism in the country was assisted by its large ethnic German minority which could understand and translate the writings of Martin Luther While Lutheranism gained a foothold among the German and Slovak speaking populations Calvinism became widely accepted among ethnic Hungarians In the more independent northwest the rulers and priests protected now by the Habsburg monarchy which had taken the field to fight the Turks defended the old Catholic faith They dragged the Protestants to prison and the stake wherever they could Such strong measures only fanned the flames of protest however Leaders of the Protestants included Matyas Devai Biro Mihaly Sztarai Istvan Szegedi Kis and Ferenc David Protestants likely formed a majority of Hungary s population at the close of the 16th century but Counter Reformation efforts in the 17th century reconverted a majority of the kingdom to Catholicism A significant Protestant minority remained most of it adhering to the Calvinist faith In 1558 the Transylvanian Diet of Turda decreed the free practice of both the Catholic and Lutheran religions but prohibited Calvinism Ten years later in 1568 the Diet extended this freedom declaring that It is not allowed to anybody to intimidate anybody with captivity or expulsion for his religion Four religions were declared to be accepted recepta religions the fourth being Unitarianism which became official in 1583 as the faith of the only Unitarian king John II Sigismund Zapolya r 1540 1571 while Eastern Orthodox Christianity was tolerated though the building of stone Orthodox churches was forbidden During the Thirty Years War Royal Habsburg Hungary joined the Catholic side until Transylvania joined the Protestant side citation needed Between 1604 and 1711 there was a series of anti Habsburg uprisings calling for equal rights and freedom for all Christian denominations with varying success the uprisings were usually organised from Transylvania The Habsburg sanctioned Counter Reformation efforts in the 17th century reconverted the majority of the kingdom to Catholicism The center of Protestant learning in Hungary has for some centuries been the University of Debrecen Founded in 1538 the university was situated in an area of Eastern Hungary under Ottoman Turkish rule during the 1600s and 1700s being allowed Islamic toleration and thus avoiding Counter Reformation persecution Romania Edit Main articles Dimitrije Ljubavic Reformation Lutherans and Serbs Religion in Romania Protestantism and History of Christianity in Romania Reformation Transylvania in what is today s Romania was a dumping ground for undesirables by the Habsburg monarchy People who did not conform to the will of the Habsburgs and the leaders of the Catholic Church were forcibly sent there Centuries of this practice allowed diverse Protestant traditions to emerge in Romania including Lutheranism Calvinism and Unitarianism Ukraine Edit Main article Protestantism in Ukraine Calvinism was popular among Hungarians who inhabited the southwestern parts of the present day Ukraine Their descendants are still there such as the Sub Carpathian Reformed Church Belarus Edit Further information Reformation Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Reformation in Poland and Counter Reformation in Poland The first Protestant congregation was founded in Brest Litovsk in the Reformed tradition and the Belarusian Evangelical Reformed Church exists today Ireland Edit Main article Reformation in Ireland A devout Catholic Mary I of England started the first Plantations of Ireland which ironically soon came to be associated with Protestantism The Reformation in Ireland was a movement for the reform of religious life and institutions that was introduced into Ireland by the English administration at the behest of King Henry VIII of England His desire for an annulment of his marriage was known as the King s Great Matter Ultimately Pope Clement VII refused the petition consequently it became necessary for the King to assert his lordship over the church in his realm to give legal effect to his wishes The English Parliament confirmed the King s supremacy over the Church in the Kingdom of England This challenge to Papal supremacy resulted in a breach with the Roman Catholic Church By 1541 the Irish Parliament had agreed to the change in status of the country from that of a Lordship to that of Kingdom of Ireland citation needed Unlike similar movements for religious reform on the continent of Europe the various phases of the English Reformation as it developed in Ireland were largely driven by changes in government policy to which public opinion in England gradually accommodated itself However a number of factors complicated the adoption of the religious innovations in Ireland the majority of the population there adhered to the Catholic Church However in the city of Dublin the Reformation took hold under the auspices of George Browne Archbishop of Dublin citation needed Italy Edit Further information Reformation in Italy and Girolamo Savonarola Waldensian symbol Lux lucet in tenebris Light glows in the darkness Word of the Protestant reformers reached Italy in the 1520s but never caught on Its development was stopped by the Counter Reformation the Inquisition and also popular disinterest Not only was the Church highly aggressive in seeking out and suppressing heresy but there was a shortage of Protestant leadership No one translated the Bible into Italian few tracts were written No core of Protestantism emerged The few preachers who did take an interest in Lutheranism as it was called in Italy were suppressed or went into exile to northern countries where their message was well received As a result the Reformation exerted almost no lasting influence in Italy except for strengthening the Catholic Church and pushing for an end to ongoing abuses during the Counter Reformation 77 78 Some Protestants left Italy and became outstanding activists of the European Reformation mainly in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth e g Giorgio Biandrata Bernardino Ochino Giovanni Alciato Giovanni Battista Cetis Fausto Sozzini Francesco Stancaro and Giovanni Valentino Gentile who propagated Nontrinitarianism there and were chief instigators of the movement of Polish Brethren 79 Some also fled to England and Switzerland including Peter Vermigli In 1532 the Waldensians who had been already present centuries before the Reformation aligned themselves and adopted the Calvinist theology The Waldensian Church survived in the Western Alps through many persecutions and remains a Protestant church in Italy 80 Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Edit Main articles Reformation in Poland and Counter Reformation in Poland Jan Laski sought unity between various Christian Churches in the Commonwealth and participated in the English Reformation In the first half of the 16th century the enormous Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth was a country of many religions and Churches including Roman Catholics Byzantine Orthodox Armenian Oriental Orthodox Ashkenazi Jews Karaites and Sunni Muslims The various groups had their own juridical systems On the eve of the Protestant Reformation Christianity held the predominant position within the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Catholicism received preferential treatment at the expense of the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox The Reformation first entered Poland through the mostly German speaking areas in the country s north In the 1520s Luther s reforms spread among the mostly German speaking inhabitants of such major cities as Danzig now Gdansk Thorn now Torun and Elbing now Elblag In Konigsberg now Kaliningrad in 1530 a Polish language edition of Luther s Small Catechism was published The Duchy of Prussia a vassal of the Polish Crown ruled by the Teutonic Knights emerged as a key center of the movement with numerous publishing houses issuing not only Bibles but also catechisms in German Polish and Lithuanian In 1525 the last Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights secularised the territory became Lutheran and established Lutheranism as the state church Lutheranism found few adherents among the other peoples of the two countries Calvinism became the most numerous Protestant group because Calvin s teachings on the role of the state within religion appealed to the nobility known as szlachta mainly in Lesser Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Several publishing houses were opened in Lesser Poland in the mid 16th century in such locations as Slomniki and Rakow At that time Mennonites and Czech Brothers came to Poland The former settled in the Vistula Delta where they used their agricultural abilities to turn parts of the delta into plodders The latter settled mostly in Greater Poland around Leszno Later on Socinus and his followers emigrated to Poland Originally the Reformed Church in Poland included both the Calvinists and the Anti trinitarians also known as the Socinians and the Polish Brethren however they eventually split due to an inability to reconcile their divergent views on the Trinity Both Catholics and Orthodox Christians converts became Calvinists and the Anti Trinitarians citation needed The Commonwealth was unique in Europe in the 16th century for its widespread tolerance confirmed by the Warsaw Confederation This agreement granted religious toleration to all nobles peasants living on nobile estates did not receive the same protections In 1563 the Brest Bible was published see also Bible translations into Polish The period of tolerance came under strain during the reign of King Sigismund III Vasa Zygmunt Wasa Sigismund who was also the King of Sweden until deposed was educated by Jesuits in Sweden before his election as King of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth During his reign he selected Catholics for the highest offices in the country This created resentment amongst the Protestant nobility however the country did not experience a religiously motivated civil war Despite concerted efforts the nobility rejected efforts to revise or rescind the Confederation of Warsaw and protected this agreement The Deluge a 20 year period of almost continual warfare marked the turning point in attitudes During the war with Sweden when King John Casimir Jan Kazimierz fled to Silesia the Icon of Mary of Czestochowa became the rallying point for military opposition to the Swedish forces Upon his return to the country Kihn John Casimir crowned Mary a Queen of Poland Despite these wars against Protestant Orthodox and Muslim neighbours the Confederation of Warsaw held with one notable exception In the aftermath of the Swedish withdrawal and truce attitudes throughout the nobility Catholic Orthodox and Protestant turned against the Polish Brethren In 1658 the Polish Brethren were forced to leave the country They were permitted to sell their immovable property and take their movable property however it is still unknown whether they received fair market value for their lands In 1666 the Sejm banned apostasy from Catholicism to any other religion under penalty of death Finally in 1717 the Silent Sejm banned non Catholics from becoming deputies of the Parliament citation needed The strategy the Catholic Church took towards reconverting the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth differed from its strategy elsewhere The unique government Poland was a republic where the citizen nobility owned the state meant the king could not enforce a religious settlement even he if so desired Instead the Catholic Church undertook a long and steady campaign of persuasion In the Ruthenian lands predominately modern day Belarus amp Ukraine the Orthodox Church also undertook a similar strategy Additionally the Orthodox also sought to join the Catholic Church accomplished in the Union of Brzesc Brest however this union failed to achieve a lasting permanent and complete union of the Catholics and Orthodox in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth An important component of the Catholic Reformation in Poland was education Numerous colleges and universities were set up throughout the country the Jesuits and Piarists were important in this regard but there were contributions of other religious orders such as the Dominicans While in the middle of the 16th century the nobility mostly sent their sons abroad for education the new German Protestant universities were important in this regard by the mid 1600s the nobility mostly stayed home for education The quality of the new Catholic schools was so great that Protestants willingly sent their children to these schools Through their education many nobles became appreciative of Catholicism or out right converted Even though the majority of the nobility were Catholic circa 1700 Protestants remained in these lands and pockets of Protestantism could be found outside the German speaking lands of the former Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth into the 20th century citation needed Among the most important Protestants of the Commonwealth were Mikolaj Rej Marcin Czechowic Andrzej Frycz Modrzewski and Symon Budny For more information see the following Kot Stanislas Socinianism in Poland The Social and Political Ideas of the Polish Antitrinitarians in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries Translated by Earl Morse Wilbur Bacon Hill Boston Starr King Press 1957 Tazbir Janusz A State without Stakes Polish Religious Toleration in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries Translated by A T Jordan Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy 1973 Kloczowski Jerzy A History of Polish Christianity Dzieje Chrzescijanstwa Polskiego English Cambridge U K New York Cambridge University Press 2000 Gudziak Borys A Crisis and Reform The Kyivan Metropolitanate the Patriarchate of Constantinople and the Genesis of the Union of Brest Harvard Series in Ukrainian Studies 2001 Teter Magda Jews and Heretics in Catholic Poland A Beleaguered Church in the Post Reformation Era Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2009 Nowakowska Natalia King Sigismund of Poland and Martin Luther The Reformation before Confessionalization Oxford United Kingdom Oxford University Press 2018 Moldova Edit Reformation in Moldova The Reformation was very insignificant in what is now Moldova and saw single congregations of Hussitism and Calvinism being founded across Besserabia During the Reformation era Moldova was repeatedly invaded Slovenia Edit Main article Religion in Slovenia Protestantism Primoz Trubar a Lutheran reformer in Slovenia Primoz Trubar is notable for consolidating the Slovene language and is considered to be the key figure of Slovenian cultural history in many aspects a major Slovene historical personality 81 He was the key figure of the Protestant Church of the Slovene Lands as he was its founder and its first superintendent The first books in Slovene Catechismus and Abecedarium were written by Trubar 82 Slovakia Edit Further information Reformation in the Kingdom of Hungary At one point in history when the majority of Slovaks 60 were Lutherans Calvinism was popular among the Hungarians who inhabited the southernmost parts of what is now Slovakia Back then Slovakia used to be a part of the Kingdom of Hungary The Counter Reformation implemented by the Habsburgs severely damaged Slovakian Protestantism although in the 2010s Protestants are still a substantial minority 10 in the country Croatia Edit Lutheranism reached northern parts of the country Serbia Edit Main article Protestantism in Serbia Vojvodina turned partially Lutheran Greece Edit Main article Timeline of Orthodoxy in Greece 1453 1821 cite ref ZAKYTHINOS108 127 0 The Protestant teachings of the Western Church were also briefly adopted within the Eastern Orthodox Church through the Greek Patriarch Cyril Lucaris in 1629 with the publishing of the Confessio Calvinistic doctrine in Geneva Motivating factors in their decision to adopt aspects of the Reformation included the historical rivalry and mistrust between the Greek Orthodox and the Roman Catholic Churches along with their concerns of Jesuit priests entering Greek lands in their attempts to propagate the teachings of the Counter Reformation to the Greek populace He subsequently sponsored Maximos of Gallipoli s translation of the New Testament into the Modern Greek language and it was published in Geneva in 1638 Upon Lucaris s death in 1638 the conservative factions within the Eastern Orthodox Church held two synods the Synod of Constantinople 1638 and Synod of Iași 1642 criticising the reforms and in the 1672 convocation led by Dositheos they officially condemned the Calvinistic doctrines In 2019 Christos Yannaras told Norman Russell that although he had participated in the Zoe movement he had come to regard it as Crypto Protestant 83 Ottoman Empire Edit Main articles Protestantism in Turkey Protestantism and Islam Mutual tolerance and Jeremias II of Constantinople The Greek Augsburg Confession This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2021 Spread Edit The Reformation spread throughout Europe beginning in 1517 reaching its peak between 1545 and 1620 The greatest geographical extent of Protestantism occurred at some point between 1545 and 1620 In 1620 the Battle of White Mountain defeated Protestants in Bohemia now the Czech Republic who sought to have the 1609 Letter of Majesty upheld Religious fragmentation in Central Europe at the outbreak of the Thirty Years War 1618 The Reformation at its peak superimposed on modern European borders The Thirty Years War began in 1618 and brought a drastic territorial and demographic decline when the House of Habsburg introduced counter reformational measures throughout their vast possessions in Central Europe Although the Thirty Years War concluded with the Peace of Westphalia the French Wars of the Counter Reformation continued as well as the expulsion of Protestants in Austria The Reformation amp the Counter Reformation both at their end and superimposed on modern European bordersAccording to a 2020 study in the American Sociological Review the Reformation spread earliest to areas where Luther had pre existing social relations such as mail correspondents and former students as well as where he had visited The study argues that these social ties contributed more to the Reformation s early breakthroughs than the printing press 84 Conclusion and legacy EditThere is no universal agreement on the exact or approximate date the Reformation ended Various interpretations emphasise different dates entire periods or argue that the Reformation never really ended 85 However there are a few popular interpretations Peace of Augsburg in 1555 officially ended the religious struggle between the two groups and made the legal division of Christianity permanent within the Holy Roman Empire allowing rulers to choose either Lutheranism or Roman Catholicism as the official confession of their state It could be considered to end with the enactment of the confessions of faith Other suggested ending years relate to the Counter Reformation or the 1648 Peace of Westphalia From a Catholic perspective the Second Vatican Council called for an end to the Counter Reformation 86 In the history of theology or philosophy the Reformation era ended with the Age of Orthodoxy The Orthodox Period also termed the Scholastic Period succeeded the Reformation with the 1545 1563 Council of Trent the 1562 Anglican Thirty nine Articles the 1580 Book of Concord and other confessions of faith The Orthodox Era ended with the development of both Pietism and the Enlightenment The Peace of Westphalia might be considered to be the event that ended the Reformation Some historians who argue that the Reformation never ended as new churches have splintered from the Catholic Church e g Old Catholics Polish National Catholic Church etc as well as all the various Protestant churches that exist today No church splintering from the Catholic Church since the 17th century has done so on the basis of the same issues animating the Reformation however citation needed Thirty Years War 1618 1648 Edit Treaty of Westphalia allowed Calvinism to be freely exercised reducing the need for Crypto Calvinism The Reformation and Counter Reformation era conflicts are termed the European wars of religion In particular the Thirty Years War 1618 1648 devastated much of Germany killing between 25 and 40 of its entire population 87 The Catholic House of Habsburg and its allies fought against the Protestant princes of Germany supported at various times by Denmark Sweden and France The Habsburgs who ruled Spain Austria the Crown of Bohemia Hungary Slovene Lands the Spanish Netherlands and much of Germany and Italy were staunch defenders of the Catholic Church Some who historians believe that the era of the Reformation came to a close when Catholic France allied itself with Protestant states against the Habsburg dynasty citation needed Two main tenets of the Peace of Westphalia which ended the Thirty Years War were All parties would now recognise the Peace of Augsburg of 1555 by which each prince would have the right to determine the religion of his own state the options being Catholicism Lutheranism and now Calvinism the principle of cuius regio eius religio Christians living in principalities where their denomination was not the established church were guaranteed the right to practice their faith in public during allotted hours and in private at their will The treaty also effectively ended the Papacy s pan European political power Pope Innocent X declared the treaty null void invalid iniquitous unjust damnable reprobate inane empty of meaning and effect for all times in his apostolic brief Zelo Domus Dei European sovereigns Catholic and Protestant alike ignored his verdict 88 Consequences of the Reformation Edit Six princes of the Holy Roman Empire and rulers of fourteen Imperial Free Cities who issued a protest or dissent against the edict of the Diet of Speyer 1529 were the first individuals to be called Protestants 89 The edict reversed concessions made to the Lutherans with the approval of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V three years earlier The term Protestant though initially purely political in nature later acquired a broader sense referring to a member of any Western church which subscribed to the main Protestant principles 89 Today Protestantism constitutes the second largest form of Christianity after Catholicism with a total of 800 million to 1 billion adherents worldwide or about 37 of all Christians 90 91 e Protestants have developed their own culture with major contributions in education the humanities and sciences the political and social order the economy and the arts and many other fields 93 The following outcomes of the Reformation regarding human capital formation the Protestant ethic economic development governance and dark outcomes have been identified by scholars 37 Human capital formation Edit Higher literacy rates 94 Lower gender gap in school enrollment and literacy rates 95 Higher primary school enrollment 96 Higher public spending on schooling and better educational performance of military conscripts 97 Higher capability in reading numeracy essay writing and history 98 Protestant ethic Edit More hours worked 99 Divergent work attitudes of Protestant and Catholics 100 Fewer referendums on leisure state intervention and redistribution in Swiss cantons with more Protestants 101 Lower life satisfaction when unemployed 102 Pro market attitudes 103 Income differences between Protestants and Catholics 94 Economic development Edit Katharina von Bora played a role in shaping social ethics during the Reformation Different levels of income tax revenue per capita of labor force in manufacturing and services and incomes of male elementary school teachers 94 Growth of Protestant cities 104 105 Greater entrepreneurship among religious minorities in Protestant states 106 107 Different social ethics 108 Industrialization 109 Governance Edit The Reformation has been credited as a key factor in the development of the state system 110 111 The Reformation has been credited as a key factor in the formation of transnational advocacy movements 112 The Reformation impacted the Western legal tradition 113 Establishment of state churches 114 Poor relief and social welfare regimes 115 116 James Madison noted that Martin Luther s doctrine of the two kingdoms marked the beginning of the modern conception of separation of church and state 117 The Calvinist and Lutheran doctrine of the lesser magistrate contributed to resistance theory in the Early Modern period and was employed in the United States Declaration of Independence Reformers such as Calvin promoted mixed government and the separation of powers 118 119 which governments such as the United States subsequently adopted 120 121 Other outcomes Edit Witch trials became more common in regions or other jurisdictions where Protestants and Catholics contested the religious market 122 Christopher J Probst in his book Demonizing the Jews Luther and the Protestant Church in Nazi Germany 2012 shows that a large number of German Protestant clergy and theologians during the Nazi Third Reich used Luther s hostile publications towards the Jews and Judaism to justify at least in part the anti Semitic policies of the National Socialists 123 In its decree on ecumenism the Second Vatican Council of Catholic Bishops declared that by contemporary dialogue that while still holding views as the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church between the churches all are led to examine their own faithfulness to Christ s will for the Church and accordingly to undertake with vigor the task of renewal and reform Unitatis Redintegratio 4 Historiography Edit Margaret C Jacob argues that there has been a dramatic shift in the historiography of the Reformation Until the 1960s historians focused their attention largely on the great leaders and theologians of the 16th century especially Luther Calvin and Zwingli Their ideas were studied in depth However the rise of the new social history in the 1960s led to looking at history from the bottom up not from the top down Historians began to concentrate on the values beliefs and behavior of the people at large She finds in contemporary scholarship the Reformation is now seen as a vast cultural upheaval a social and popular movement textured and rich because of its diversity 124 Music and art Edit Further information Protestantism Arts Painting and sculpture Northern Mannerism Lutheran art German Renaissance Art Swedish art English art Woodcuts Art conflicts BeeldenstormBuilding Influence on church architectureLiterature Elizabethan Metaphysical poets Propaganda Welsh Scottish Anglo Irish German Czech Swiss Slovak Sorbian Romanian Danish Faroese Norwegian Swedish Finnish Icelandic Dutch Renaissance and Golden Age Folklore of the Low Countries 16th century Renaissance humanism 16th century in poetry 16th century in literature English Renaissance theatreMusical forms Hymnody of continental Europe Music of the British Isles Hymn tune Lutheran chorale Lutheran hymn Anglican church music Exclusive psalmody Anglican chant Homophony vs PolyphonyLiturgies Reformed worship Calvin s liturgy Formula missae Deutsche Messe Ecclesiastical Latin Lutheran and Anglican Mass in music Cyclic mass vs Paraphrase mass Roman vs Sarum Rites Sequence retained by Lutherans mostly banned by Trent Hymnals First and Second Lutheran hymnals First Wittenberg hymnal Swenske songer Thomisson s hymnal Ausbund Book of Common Prayer Metrical psalters Souterliedekens Book of Common Order Genevan Psalter Scottish PsalterSecular music English Madrigal School Greensleeves German madrigals Moravian traditional music Meistersinger Partly due to Martin Luther s love for music music became important in Lutheranism The study and practice of music was encouraged in Protestant majority countries Songs such as the Lutheran hymns or the Calvinist Psalter became tools for the spread of Protestant ideas and beliefs as well as identity flags Similar attitudes developed among Catholics who in turn encouraged the creation and use of music for religious purposes 125 See also EditWomen in the Protestant Reformation Anti Catholicism Criticism of Protestantism Book of Concord Catholic Protestant relations Concordat of Worms Confessionalization Counter Reformation the Catholic response European wars of religion Free Grace theology Historiography of religion List of Protestant Reformers Propaganda during the Reformation Protestant culture Protestantism in Germany Proto Protestantism The Reformation and its influence on church architecture European City of the ReformationNotes Edit For an example of Reformation history in the Radical Reformation Tradition see The Trail of Blood In the end while the Reformation emphasis on Protestants reading the Scriptures was one factor in the development of literacy the impact of printing itself the wider availability of printed works at a cheaper price and the increasing focus on education and learning as key factors in obtaining a lucrative post were also significant contributory factors 32 In the first decade of the Reformation Luther s message became a movement and the output of religious pamphlets in Germany was at its height 35 See the wikipedia entry on Joanes Leizarraga the priest who did the translation His manuscript is considered to be a cornerstone in Basque literature and a pioneering attempt towards Basque language standardization Most current estimates place the world s Protestant population in the range of 800 million to more than 1 billion For example author Hans Hillerbrand estimated a total Protestant population of 833 457 000 in 2004 92 while a report by Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary 961 961 000 with inclusion of independents as defined in this article in mid 2015 91 References Edit Armstrong Alstair 2002 European Reformation 1500 1610 Heinemann Advanced History 1500 55 Heinemann Educational ISBN 0 435 32710 0 Davies Europe pp 291 293 Fahlbusch Erwin and Bromiley Geoffrey William 2003 The Encyclopedia of Christianity Volume 3 Grand Rapids Michigan Eerdmans p 362 Counter Reformation Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Examen Volumes I II Volume I begins on page 46 of the pdf and Volume II begins on page 311 Examen Volumes III IV Volume III begins on page 13 of the pdf and Volume IV begins on page 298 All volumes free on Google Books Martin Chemnitz on the Doctrine of Justification by Jacob A O Preus Martin Chemnitz s views on Trent the genesis and the genius of the Examen Concilii Tridentini by Arthur Carl Piepkorn 1966 National Geographic A Fun Animated History of the Reformation and the Man Who Started It All Short Film Showcase retrieved 6 January 2019 Eire Carlos M N Calvin and Nicodemism A Reappraisal Sixteenth Century Journal X 1 1979 Martinez Fernandez Luis 2000 Crypto Protestants and Pseudo Catholics in the Nineteenth Century Hispanic Caribbean Journal of Ecclesiastical History 51 2 347 365 doi 10 1017 S0022046900004255 S2CID 162296826 Lacey Baldwin Smith This Realm of England 1399 to 1688 3rd ed 1976 p 41 Emily Michael John Wyclif on body and mind Journal of the History of Ideas 2003 p 343 Hollister amp Bennett 2002 p 342 Mahoney William 2011 The History of the Czech Republic and Slovakia Santa Barbara California Greenwood ISBN 978 0 313 36306 1 Oberman and Walliser Schwarzbart Luther Man between God and the Devil pp 54 55 Douglas ed Wycliffe John New International Dictionary of the Christian Church Lutzow Frantisek 1911 Hussites In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 14 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 7 9 Patrick James A 2007 Renaissance and Reformation p 1231 ISBN 978 0 7614 7650 4 Fresco fragment revives Papal scandal BBC News 21 July 2007 The Death of Alexander VI 1503 Eyewitness to History 2007 Retrieved 27 July 2014 Schofield Martin Luther p 122 a b c d e Rubin Printing and Protestants Review of Economics and Statistics pp 270 286 Atkinson Fitzgerald Printing Reformation and Information Control Short History of Copyright pp 15 22 Whaley pp 222 23 226 Whaley pp 222 23 Yarnell III pp 95 6 Whaley p 220 Horsch John 1995 Mennonites in Europe Herald Press p 299 ISBN 978 0 8361 1395 2 Euan Cameron 1991 The European Reformation New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 873093 4 Andrew P Klager Ingestion and Gestation Peacemaking the Lord s Supper and the Theotokos in the Mennonite Anabaptist and Eastern Orthodox Traditions Journal of Ecumenical Studies 47 no 3 summer 2012 pp 441 442 Euan Cameron 1 March 2012 The European Reformation OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 954785 2 page needed Pettegree Reformation World p 543 a b Media Markets and Institutional Change Evidence from the Protestant Reformation PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 a b Edwards Printing Propaganda and Martin Luther page needed Pettegree and Hall Reformation and the Book Historical Journal p 786 Weimer Luther and Cranach Lutheran Quarterly pp 387 405 a b c Becker Sascha O Pfaff Steven Rubin Jared 2016 Causes and Consequences of the Protestant Reformation PDF Explorations in Economic History 62 1 25 doi 10 1016 j eeh 2016 07 007 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Iyigun Murat 1 November 2008 Luther and Suleyman The Quarterly Journal of Economics 123 4 1465 1494 doi 10 1162 qjec 2008 123 4 1465 ISSN 0033 5533 a b Cantoni Davide 1 May 2012 Adopting a New Religion the Case of Protestantism in 16th Century Germany PDF The Economic Journal 122 560 502 531 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0297 2012 02495 x hdl 10230 19925 ISSN 1468 0297 S2CID 154412497 a b Kim Hyojoung Pfaff Steven 1 April 2012 Structure and Dynamics of Religious Insurgency Students and the Spread of the Reformation American Sociological Review 77 2 188 215 doi 10 1177 0003122411435905 ISSN 0003 1224 S2CID 144678806 Pfaff Steven 12 March 2013 The true citizens of the city of God the cult of saints the Catholic social order and the urban Reformation in Germany Theory and Society 42 2 189 218 doi 10 1007 s11186 013 9188 x ISSN 0304 2421 S2CID 144049459 Ekelund Jr Robert B Hebert Robert F Tollison Robert D 1 June 2002 An Economic Analysis of the Protestant Reformation PDF Journal of Political Economy 110 3 646 671 doi 10 1086 339721 ISSN 0022 3808 S2CID 152651397 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 a b Curuk Malik Smulders Sjak 15 July 2016 Malthus Meets Luther the Economics Behind the German Reformation Report SSRN 2828615 Becker Sascha O Hsiao Yuan Pfaff Steven Rubin Jared 1 September 2020 Multiplex Network Ties and the Spatial Diffusion of Radical Innovations Martin Luther s Leadership in the Early Reformation American Sociological Review 85 5 857 894 doi 10 1177 0003122420948059 Becking Bob Cannegieter Alex van er Poll Wilfred 2016 From Babylon to Eternity The Exile Remembered and Constructed in Text and Tradition Routledge p 91 ISBN 978 1 134 90386 3 The Elector Frederick the Wise www reformation org Retrieved 14 March 2020 Junius Benjamin Remensnyder 1893 The Lutheran Manual Boschen amp Wefer Company p 12 Frey H 1918 Is One Church as Good as Another Vol 37 The Lutheran Witness pp 82 83 Estep p 190 Estep p 150 a b c d Lockhart 2007 p 61 Lockhart 2007 p 60 Berntson 2006 p 64 Jon R Hjalmarsson History of Iceland From the Settlement to the Present Day Iceland 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266 doi 10 1016 j eeh 2012 12 001 S2CID 154150626 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Boppart Timo Falkinger Josef Grossmann Volker 1 April 2014 Protestantism and Education Reading the Bible and Other Skills PDF Economic Inquiry 52 2 874 895 doi 10 1111 ecin 12058 ISSN 1465 7295 S2CID 10220106 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Spenkuch Jorg L 20 March 2011 The Protestant Ethic and Work Micro Evidence from Contemporary Germany Rochester New York Social Science Research Network SSRN 1703302 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Schaltegger Christoph A Torgler Benno 1 May 2010 Work ethic Protestantism and human capital PDF Economics Letters 107 2 99 101 doi 10 1016 j econlet 2009 12 037 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Basten Christoph Betz Frank 2013 Beyond Work Ethic Religion Individual and Political Preferences PDF American Economic Journal Economic Policy 5 3 67 91 doi 10 1257 pol 5 3 67 hdl 1814 62006 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 van Hoorn Andre Maseland Robbert 1 July 2013 Does a Protestant work ethic exist Evidence from the well being effect of unemployment PDF Journal of Economic Behavior amp Organization 91 1 12 doi 10 1016 j jebo 2013 03 038 hdl 11370 edf4c610 0828 4ba7 b222 9ce36e3c58be S2CID 73683588 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Hayward R David Kemmelmeier Markus 1 November 2011 Weber Revisited A Cross National Analysis of Religiosity Religious Culture and Economic Attitudes Journal of Cross Cultural Psychology 42 8 1406 1420 doi 10 1177 0022022111412527 ISSN 0022 0221 S2CID 9101480 Cantoni Davide 1 August 2015 The Economic Effects of the Protestant Reformation Testing the Weber Hypothesis in the German Lands Journal of the European Economic Association 13 4 561 598 doi 10 1111 jeea 12117 hdl 10230 11729 ISSN 1542 4774 S2CID 7528944 Origins of growth How state institutions forged during the Protestant Reformation drove development VoxEU org 26 April 2016 Retrieved 26 April 2016 Nunziata Luca Rocco Lorenzo 1 January 2014 The Protestant Ethic and Entrepreneurship Evidence from Religious Minorities from the Former Holy Roman Empire Mpra Paper University Library of Munich Germany Nunziata Luca Rocco Lorenzo 20 January 2016 A tale of minorities evidence on religious ethics and entrepreneurship Journal of Economic Growth 21 2 189 224 doi 10 1007 s10887 015 9123 2 ISSN 1381 4338 S2CID 55740195 Arrunada Benito 1 September 2010 Protestants and Catholics Similar Work Ethic Different Social Ethic The Economic Journal 120 547 890 918 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0297 2009 02325 x hdl 10230 624 ISSN 1468 0297 S2CID 6753991 Spater Jeremy Tranvik Isak 1 November 2019 The Protestant Ethic Reexamined Calvinism and Industrialization Comparative Political Studies 52 13 14 1963 1994 doi 10 1177 0010414019830721 ISSN 0010 4140 S2CID 204438351 Nexon D H 20 April 2009 The Struggle for Power in Early Modern Europe Religious Conflict Dynastic Empires and International Change press princeton edu ISBN 978 0 691 13793 3 Philpott Daniel 1 January 2000 The Religious Roots of Modern International Relations World Politics 52 2 206 245 doi 10 1017 S0043887100002604 ISSN 1086 3338 S2CID 40773221 Stamatov Peter 1 August 2010 Activist Religion Empire and the Emergence of Modern Long Distance Advocacy Networks American Sociological Review 75 4 607 628 doi 10 1177 0003122410374083 hdl 10016 33305 ISSN 0003 1224 S2CID 145615068 Law and Revolution II Harold J Berman Harvard University Press www hup harvard edu Retrieved 19 April 2016 Gorski Philip S 1 January 2000 Historicizing the Secularization Debate Church State and Society in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe ca 1300 to 1700 American Sociological Review 65 1 138 167 doi 10 2307 2657295 JSTOR 2657295 Pullan Brian 1 January 1976 Catholics and the Poor in Early Modern Europe Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 26 15 34 doi 10 2307 3679070 JSTOR 3679070 S2CID 161899850 kahl sigrun 1 April 2005 the religious roots of modern poverty policy catholic lutheran and reformed protestant traditions compared European Journal of Sociology Archives Europeennes de Sociologie 46 1 91 126 doi 10 1017 S0003975605000044 hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 0012 4DFA 2 ISSN 1474 0583 S2CID 9584702 Madison James 1865 Madison to Schaeffer 1821 pp 242 43 Clifton E Olmstead 1960 History of Religion in the United States Prentice Hall Englewood Cliffs N J pp 9 10 Jan Weerda Calvin in Evangelisches Soziallexikon col 210 11 Heinrich August Winkler 2012 Geschichte des Westens Von den Anfangen in der Antike bis zum 20 Jahrhundert Third Edition Munich Germany ISBN 978 3 406 59235 5 pp 290ff Constitution Day 2021 Mixed Government Bicameralism and the Creation of the U S Senate U S Senate 17 September 2021 Retrieved 30 December 2021 Witch Trials PDF Archived from the original PDF on 13 May 2016 Christopher J Probst Demonizing the Jews Luther and the Protestant Church in Nazi Germany Indiana University Press in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 2012 ISBN 978 0 253 00100 9 Jacob Living the Enlightenment p 215 Chiara Bertoglio Reforming Music Music and the Religious Reformations of the Sixteenth Century Berlin De Gruyter 2017 Bibliography Edit Atkinson Benedict Fitzgerald Brian 2014 Printing Reformation and Information Control A Short History of Copyright The Genie of Information Springer pp 15 22 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 02075 4 3 ISBN 978 3 319 02074 7 Bertoglio Chiara 2017 Reforming Music Music and the Religious Reformations of the Sixteenth Century De Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 052081 1 Bray Gerald ed Documents of the English Reformation James Clarke Cameron Euan 2012 The European Reformation Second ed Oxford University Press Cameron Euan 1984 The Reformation of the Heretics The Waldenses of the Alps 1480 1580 Clarendon Press Church Frederic C 1931 The Literature of the Italian Reformation Journal of Modern History 3 3 457 473 doi 10 1086 235763 JSTOR 1874959 S2CID 144787915 Hollister Warren Bennett Judith 2002 Medieval Europe A Short History 9 ed Boston McGraw Hill Companies Inc ISBN 9780072346572 Cross F L ed 2005 Westphalia Peace of The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church New York Oxford University Press page needed Douglas J D ed 1974 Wycliffe John The New International Dictionary of the Christian Church Paternoster Press Edwards Jr Mark U 1994 Printing Propaganda and Martin Luther Estep William R 1986 Renaissance amp Reformation Grand Rapids MI Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 0050 3 Firpo Massimo 2004 The Italian Reformation In Hsia R Po chia ed A Companion to the Reformation World Blackwell pp 169 184 ISBN 978 1 4051 7865 5 Jacob Margaret C 1991 Living the Enlightenment Freemasonry and Politics in Eighteenth century Europe Oxford University Press Lockhart Paul Douglas 2007 Denmark 1513 1660 The Rise and Decline of a Renaissance Monarchy Oxford University Press MacCulloch Diarmaid 2005 The Reformation ISBN 9780143035381 Berntson Martin 2006 The Dissolution of the Hospitaller houses in Scandinavia In Mol Johannes A Militzer Klaus Nicholson Helen J eds The Military Orders and the Reformation Choices State Building and the Hilversum Verloren pp 59 78 Oberman Heiko Augustinus Walliser Schwarzbart Eileen 2006 1982 Luther Man between God and the Devil Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10313 7 Patrick James 2007 Renaissance and Reformation New York Marshall Cavendish ISBN 978 0 7614 7650 4 Pettegree Andrew 2000 The Reformation World Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 44527 3 Pettegree Andrew Hall Matthew December 2004 The Reformation and the Book A Reconsideration The Historical Journal 47 4 785 808 doi 10 1017 S0018246X04003991 JSTOR 4091657 S2CID 145512622 Rublack Ulinka 2010 Dressing Up Cultural Identity in Renaissance Europe Oxford University Press Rubin Jared 2014 Printing and Protestants An Empirical Test of the Role of Printing in the Reformation Review of Economics and Statistics 96 2 270 286 doi 10 1162 REST a 00368 S2CID 52885129 Schofield John 2011 Martin Luther A Concise History of His Life and Works History Press Limited Weimer Christoph 2004 Luther and Cranach on Justification in Word and Image Lutheran Quarterly 18 4 387 405 Whaley Joachim 2012 Germany and the Holy Roman Empire Volume I Maximilian I to the Peace of Westphalia 1493 1648 Oxford History of Early Modern Europe Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 873101 6 Yarnell III Malcolm B 2014 Royal Priesthood in the English Reformation Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 968625 4 Further reading EditSurveys Edit Appold Kenneth G The Reformation A Brief History 2011 online Collinson Patrick The Reformation A History 2006 Elton Geoffrey R and Andrew Pettegree eds Reformation Europe 1517 1559 1999 excerpt and text search Elton G R ed The New Cambridge Modern History Vol 2 The Reformation 1520 1559 1st ed 1958 online free Gassmann Gunther and Mark W Oldenburg Historical dictionary of Lutheranism Scarecrow Press 2011 Hillerbrand Hans J The Protestant Reformation 2nd ed 2009 Hsia R Po chia ed A Companion to the Reformation World 2006 Lindberg Carter The European Reformations 2nd ed 2009 Mourret Fernand History of the Catholic Church vol 5 1931 online free pp 325 516 by French Catholic scholar Naphy William G 2007 The Protestant Revolution From Martin Luther to Martin Luther King Jr BBC Books ISBN 978 0 563 53920 9 Spalding Martin 2010 The History of the Protestant Reformation In Germany and Switzerland and in England Ireland Scotland the Netherlands France and Northern Europe General Books LLC Sascha O Becker Steven Pfaff and Jared Rubin Causes and Consequences of the Protestant Reformation 2015 online Reeves Michael The Unquenchable Flame Discovering the Heart of the Reformation 2nd ed 2016 Spitz Lewis William 2003 The Protestant Reformation 1517 1559 Theology Edit Bagchi David and David C Steinmetz eds The Cambridge Companion to Reformation Theology 2004 Bainton Roland 1952 The Reformation of the Sixteenth Century Boston The Beacon Press ISBN 978 0 8070 1301 4 Barrett Matthew and Michael Horton Reformation Theology A Systematic Summary 2017 Braaten Carl E and Robert W Jenson The Catholicity of the Reformation Grand Rapids Eerdmans 1996 ISBN 0 8028 4220 8 Cunningham William The Reformers and the Theology of the Reformation 2013 Payton James R Jr Getting the Reformation Wrong Correcting Some Misunderstandings IVP Academic 2010 Pelikan Jaroslav 1984 Reformation of Church and Dogma 1300 1700 Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 65377 8 Primary sources in translation Edit Fosdick Harry Emerson ed Great Voices of the Reformation and of other putative reformers before and after it an Anthology ed with an introd and commentaries by Harry Emerson Fosdick Modern Library 1952 xxx 546 pp Janz Denis ed A Reformation Reader Primary Texts with Introductions 2008 excerpt and text search Littlejohn Bradford and Jonathan Roberts eds Reformation Theology A Reader of Primary Sources with Introductions 2018 Luther Martin Luther s Correspondence and Other Contemporary Letters 2 vols tr and ed by Preserved Smith Charles Michael Jacobs The Lutheran Publication Society Philadelphia Pa 1913 1918 vol 2 1521 1530 from Google Books Reprint of Vol 1 Wipf amp Stock Publishers March 2006 ISBN 1 59752 601 0 Spitz Lewis W The Protestant Reformation Major Documents St Louis Concordia Publishing House 1997 ISBN 0 570 04993 8 Historiography Edit Bates Lucy 2010 The Limits of Possibility in England s Long Reformation Historical Journal 53 4 1049 1070 doi 10 1017 S0018246X10000403 JSTOR 40930369 S2CID 159904890 Bradshaw Brendan 1983 The Reformation and the Counter Reformation History Today 33 11 42 45 Brady Thomas A Jr 1991 People s Religions in Reformation Europe The Historical Journal 24 1 173 182 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00013984 JSTOR 2639713 S2CID 162991792 de Boer Wietse 2009 An Uneasy Reunion The Catholic World in Reformation Studies Archiv fur Reformationsgeschichte 100 1 366 387 doi 10 14315 arg 2009 100 1 366 S2CID 170395778 Dickens A G Tonkin John M eds 1985 The Reformation in Historical Thought Harvard University Press 443 pp excerpt Dixon C Scott 2012 Contesting the Reformation Fritze Ronald H 2005 The English Reformation Obedience Destruction and Cultural Adaptation Journal of Ecclesiastical History 56 1 107 115 doi 10 1017 S0022046904002106 S2CID 162920265 Haigh Christopher 1982 The recent historiography of the English Reformation The Historical Journal 25 4 995 1007 doi 10 1017 s0018246x00021385 JSTOR 2638647 S2CID 154848886 Haigh Christopher 1990 The English Reformation A Premature Birth a Difficult Labour and a Sickly Child The Historical Journal 33 2 449 459 doi 10 1017 s0018246x0001342x JSTOR 2639467 S2CID 162341988 Haigh Christopher 2002 Catholicism in Early Modern England Bossy and Beyond The Historical Journal 45 2 481 494 doi 10 1017 S0018246X02002479 JSTOR 3133654 S2CID 163117077 Heininen Simo Czaika Otfried 2010 Wittenberg Influences on the Reformation in Scandinavia European History Online Mainz Institute of European History Retrieved 17 December 2012 Howard Thomas A and Mark A Noll eds Protestantism after 500 Years Oxford UP 2016 pp 384 Hsia Po Chia ed 2006 A Companion to the Reformation World Hsia R Po chia 2004 Reformation on the Continent Approaches Old and New Journal of Religious History 28 2 162 170 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9809 2004 00212 x Hsia R Po Chia 1987 The Myth of the Commune Recent Historiography on City and Reformation in Germany Central European History 20 3 203 215 doi 10 1017 s0008938900012061 JSTOR 4546103 S2CID 146309764 Karant Nunn Susan C 2005 Changing One s Mind Transformations in Reformation History from a Germanist s Perspective Renaissance Quarterly 58 2 1101 1127 doi 10 1353 ren 2008 0933 JSTOR 10 1353 ren 2008 0933 S2CID 170423375 Kooi Christine The Reformation in the Netherlands Some Historiographic Contributions in English Archiv fur Reformationsgeschichte 100 1 2009 293 307 MacCulloch Diarmaid 1995 The Impact of the English Reformation The Historical Journal 38 1 151 153 doi 10 1017 s0018246x00016332 JSTOR 2640168 S2CID 162582384 MacCulloch Diarmaid Laven Mary Duffy Eamon 2006 Recent Trends in the Study of Christianity in Sixteenth Century Europe Renaissance Quarterly 59 3 697 731 doi 10 1353 ren 2008 0381 JSTOR 10 1353 ren 2008 0381 Marnef Guido 2009 Belgian and Dutch Post war Historiography on the Protestant and Catholic Reformation in the Netherlands Archiv fur Reformationsgeschichte 100 1 271 292 doi 10 14315 arg 2009 100 1 271 S2CID 164021053 Marshall Peter 2009 Re defining the English Reformation PDF Journal of British Studies 48 3 564 586 doi 10 1086 600128 JSTOR 27752571 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Menchi Silvana Seidel 2009 The Age of Reformation and Counter Reformation in Italian Historiography 1939 2009 Archiv fur Reformationsgeschichte 100 1 193 217 doi 10 14315 arg 2009 100 1 193 S2CID 201096496 Nieden Marcel 2012 The Wittenberg Reformation as a Media Event European History Online Mainz Institute of European History Retrieved 17 December 2012 Scott Tom 1991 The Common People in the German Reformation The Historical Journal 24 1 183 192 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00013996 JSTOR 2639714 S2CID 161111542 Scott Tom 2008 The Reformation between Deconstruction and Reconstruction Reflections on Recent Writings on the German Reformation German History 26 3 406 422 doi 10 1093 gerhis ghn027 Walsham Alexandra 2008 The Reformation and The Disenchantment of the World Reassessed Historical Journal 51 2 497 528 doi 10 1017 S0018246X08006808 JSTOR 20175171 Walsham Alexandra Toleration Pluralism and Coexistence The Ambivalent Legacies of the Reformation Archiv fur Reformationsgeschichte Archive for Reformation History 108 1 2017 181 190 Online Wiesner Hanks Merry 2009 Gender and the Reformation Archiv fur Reformationsgeschichte 100 1 350 365 doi 10 14315 arg 2009 100 1 350 S2CID 192966856 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Reformation Internet Archive of Related Texts and Documents 16th Century Reformation Reading Room Extensive online resources Tyndale Seminary The Reformation Collection From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress An ecumenical official valuation by Lutherans and Catholics 500 years later The Historyscoper Robinson James Harvey 1911 Reformation The Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 23 11th ed pp 4 22 Portals History Religion Christianity Calvinism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reformation amp oldid 1140997403, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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