Survey							
                            
		                
		                * Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
The Reformation ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS: WHAT CONDITIONS CAN ENCOURAGE THE DESIRE FOR REFORM? HOW CAN REFORM INFLUENCE SOCIETY AND BELIEFS? Prelude to Reformation  Christian Humanism: a movement that developed in northern Europe during the Renaissance combining classical learning (humanism) with the goal of reforming the Catholic Church  Desiderius Erasmus   Need for Reform   Sought to reform the Church from within Church officials more concerned about career/wealth Indulgence: a release from all or part of punishment for sin by the Catholic Church, reducing time in purgatory after death  Sold by the Church and signed by the Pope Martin Luther and the NinetyFive Theses    Martin Luther  German monk  Believed humans saved through their faith, not good works  Bible only valid source of truth The Ninety-Five Theses  Luther angry about selling of indulgences  Said to have posted “complaints” on door of Castle Church in Wittenberg  Thousands of copies made thanks to printing press A Break with the Church  Luther excommunicated The Rise of Lutheranism  Luther supported by German rulers   Lutheranism: the religious doctrine that Martin Luther developed   Took control of Catholic churches, forming state churches The first Protestant faith The Peasant’s War  Rebellious peasants turned to Luther for support  Luther supported German princes Political Impact   Religious warfare in Germany  German princes sided with Luther as a way to oppose papal authority  Charles V (Holy Roman Emperor) unable to defeat them due to other political struggles Peace of Augsburg (1555)  Formally accepted the division of Christianity in Germany The Spread of Protestantism   Protestantism in Switzerland  Reform movement led by priest, Ulrich Zwingli  Killed in war between Protestant and Catholic states John Calvin  Took over Protestantism in Switzerland  Introduced the idea of predestination (belief that God has determined in advance who will be saved and who will be damned)  Became most important form of Protestantism Reformation in England    King Henry VIII  Request for divorce/annulment from wife Catherine denied by pope  Led the England’s break from the Catholic Church Anne Boleyn  Henry’s new wife and queen  Gave birth to future Queen Elizabeth I Anglican Church (Church of England)  King was the head of the Church  Dissolved monasteries and sold their lands/possessions  Remained similar to Catholicism Reformation in England   Edward VI succeeded Henry  Son of Henry’s third wife  Anglican Church moved in a more Protestant direction  Edward died at 16 from tuberculosis Mary I (Bloody Mary) succeeded Edward  Catherine’s daughter and a Catholic  Ordered burning of almost 300 Protestants The Spread of Protestantism    Anabaptists  Believed in complete separation of church and state  Persecuted by both Protestants and Catholics Reformation and Society  Protestants expanded education  Abolished monasticism and celibacy requirement for clergy Anti-Semitism  Remained common  Luther recommended Jewish synagogues be destroyed  Catholics forced Jews to live in ghettos The Counter-Reformation   Society of Jesus (The Jesuits)  Founded by Ignatius Loyola (Spain)  Used education to restore Catholicism and spread it to other parts of the world Reform of the Papacy  Pope Paul III established the Reform Commission and the Council of Trent  Council reaffirmed Catholic teachings  Selling of indulgences forbidden