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Counter-Reformation - Phillipsburg School District
Counter-Reformation - Phillipsburg School District

... • 1524, tens of thousands of German peasants stormed castles, monasteries ...
Chapter 8
Chapter 8

... – He captured the essence of the musical CounterReformation. – His style became a model for church-music composition and is used by students of ...
Religious Studies 2013 - Origins Text
Religious Studies 2013 - Origins Text

... Radical Reformation. It differs more from medieval Christianity than do other types of Protestantism, and in some ways it even differs from other forms of Protestantism more than they do from Roman Catholicism. The Radical Reformation is more important for the novelty of its ideas than for the numbe ...
Record: 1 Reformation and Renaissance 1517
Record: 1 Reformation and Renaissance 1517

... The century leading up to the Reformation (broadly speaking, the mid-1400s into the early -to-mid 1500s) had seen the flowering of the Renaissance. Renaissance (a French word meaning "rebirth") is a broad term that implies broad cultural shifts. There was renewed interest in the culture of ancient R ...
The Reformation - LHS Social Studies Home
The Reformation - LHS Social Studies Home

... • Henry issued The Act in Restraint of Appeals (1533), which made the king supreme head of England • The Act of Submission of the Clergy (1534), clergy must submit to the monarch • The Supremacy Act, (1534) made the king head of the Church of England • Separated Church of England from the Roman Cat ...
Renaissance and Reformation ONE
Renaissance and Reformation ONE

... – They considered themselves to be a community of true Christians modeled on the first Christian community. – Theirs was primarily an upper-class movement. – Though persecuted and condemned, the movement spread to many cities in southern Germany. ...
Anabaptists, name applied to certain religious sects that arose in
Anabaptists, name applied to certain religious sects that arose in

... Anabaptism appealed most strongly to the poor and to uneducated peasants and artisans. Anabaptists in Europe were widely persecuted largely because two influential segments of society—the aristocracy and the Orthodox Reformation leaders—were united against their egalitarianism and their opposition ...
The English Renaissance (Early Modern Period)
The English Renaissance (Early Modern Period)

... The Reformation • People were fed up with the corruption of the Catholic Church (remember the Pardonder?). • Martin Luther, German Monk, nailed his famous ninety-five theses to the church door in Wittenberg in 1517. • Humanist scholars were doing academic work that would seem to challenge Church aut ...
PROTEST - Blue Valley Schools
PROTEST - Blue Valley Schools

... [PROTEST]ants - Protestants ...
Protestant Reformation_ Luther
Protestant Reformation_ Luther

... Why did Luther’s Ideas Spread so Quickly in Germany? There was no “Germany” It was a confederation of 300+ states, kingdom, etc. Though part of Holy Roman Empire of Emperor Charles V, there was very little central control. The King could not enforce religion like in France or Spain. Many of the ind ...
How was the Hapsburg empire divided? Charles V, the Holy Roman
How was the Hapsburg empire divided? Charles V, the Holy Roman

... He argued that people had natural rights, belonging to them from birth, including life, liberty, and property. In his Two Treatises of Government, (a response to the Glorious Revolution) Locke argued that the role of governments were to protect people's natural rights. He set out the idea, also, tha ...
Variants of Christianity
Variants of Christianity

... What is Anglicanism? Anglicanism does not have the Pope as a central authority.  The focus in on Biblical authority with a special place held for the Archbishop of Canterbury.  Anglicans are often divided into: a) Low Anglican: this includes a variety of Protestant faiths. b) High Anglican: This ...
The Reformation Part II
The Reformation Part II

... the Lord’s supper “Sacrament” was symbolic— Catholics believed that the wine and water changed into the blood and body of Christ ...
Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes Chapter 5, Section 3 Did You
Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes Chapter 5, Section 3 Did You

... D. The Church excommunicated Luther in 1521. He was summoned to appear before the imperial diet (legislative assembly) of the Holy Roman Empire in the city of Worms. The emperor Charles V thought he could get Luther to change his ideas. Luther refused, which outraged the emperor. The Edict of Worms ...
Chapter 3 multiple-choice The principal motivation shaping the
Chapter 3 multiple-choice The principal motivation shaping the

... 3. one reason that the Massachusetts Bay colony was not a true democracy is that a. only church members could vote for the governor and the Gen. Court b. political offices were dominated by the clergy c. people were not permitted to discuss issues freely in their own towns d. the governor and his as ...
Reform and Renewal in the Christian Church
Reform and Renewal in the Christian Church

... 4. Five times between 1521 and 1555, Charles V went to war with the Valois kings of France (French supported Lutheran princes within Germany) 5. In the Peace of Augsburg (1555) accepted religious status quo in which each prince of Germany was permitted to determine the religion of his territory 5. T ...
document
document

... The world of the late medieval Roman Catholic Church from which the 16th-century Reformers emerged was a complex one. Over the centuries the church, particularly in the office of the papacy, had become deeply involved in the political life of Western Europe. Abuses such as the sale of indulgences (o ...
AP European history Test II
AP European history Test II

... Cardinal Richelieu was an ecclesiastic who gained power during Marie de’ Medici and Louis XIII’s time. He was a politique who was responsible for various mercantilist edicts. There was a renewed threat of civil war, nobles feuding, so Richelieu outlawed dueling, etc. In 1627, there was Huguenot rebe ...
Chapter 14: Reform and Renewal in the Christian
Chapter 14: Reform and Renewal in the Christian

... a. As a result, the people of Germany became either Lutheran or Catholic depending on the preference of their prince. 5. The Protestant Reformation in Germany contributed to its continued fragmentation. IV. ...
Reformation Notes
Reformation Notes

...  Anabaptists sought to return to the practices of the early Christian church, which was a voluntary association of believers with no connection to the state.  Perhaps the first Anabaptists appeared in Zurich in 1525 under the leadership of Conrad Grebel and were called the Swiss Brethren. The Melc ...
Chapter 17 Questions
Chapter 17 Questions

... In what country did the Renaissance period begin? What direction did it ...
The English Reformation
The English Reformation

... • Eng. Reform was a political crisis • It began when Henry VIII decided to rid himself of his wife, Catherine of Aragon. • Pope Julius II had granted permission for them to marry. • He considered her too old to bear anymore children and he wanted a son. • They had 1 daughter, Mary • Clement VII refu ...
The legacy of the Reformation and the causes of the English Civil
The legacy of the Reformation and the causes of the English Civil

... the process whereby England broke away from the Catholic Church in Rome. It was begun under Henry VIII and became permanent under Elizabeth I. Only by understanding this background will you be able to see that in Early Stuart England. After the Reformation the following applied in England. 1. There ...
Chapter 1
Chapter 1

... Roman Catholic Church in England. The subsequent destruction of the Armada effectively opened New World exploration and settlement to other European nations. As early as 1578 Sir Humphrey Gilbert and later his half brother Sir Walter Raleigh had made unsuccessful attempts to plant English colonies ...
The Reformation PowerPoint PDF
The Reformation PowerPoint PDF

... Church and formed the Church of England a. Act of Supremacy, 1534: Henry VIII became head of the Church of England b. Catholic lands were confiscated. c. Monasteries were closed down. d. Act of Succession (1534): all of the king’s subjects had to take an oath of loyalty to the king as head of the An ...
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Beeldenstorm



Beeldenstorm in Dutch, roughly translatable to ""statue storm"", or Bildersturm in German (""image/statue storm""), also the Iconoclastic Fury, is a term used for outbreaks of destruction of religious images that occurred in Europe in the 16th century. During these spates of iconoclasm, Catholic art and many forms of church fittings and decoration were destroyed in unofficial or mob actions by nominally Calvinist Protestant crowds as part of the Protestant Reformation. Most of the destruction was of art in churches and public places. The Dutch term usually specifically refers to the wave of disorderly attacks in the summer of 1566 that spread rapidly through the Low Countries from south to north. Similar outbreaks of iconoclasm took place in other parts of Europe, especially in Switzerland and the Holy Roman Empire in the period between 1522 and 1566, notably Zürich (in 1523), Copenhagen (1530), Münster (1534), Geneva (1535), and Augsburg (1537).In England there was both government-sponsored removal of images and also spontaneous attacks from 1535 onwards, and in Scotland from 1559. In France there were several outbreaks as part of the French Wars of Religion from 1560 onwards.
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