Our popular image of the Reformation is of Martin Luther getting angry at the Catholic Church for selling indulgences, nailing 95 theses to a church door, and suddenly a new religion springing forth.
Historian Drummond (A Quite Impossible Proposal) offers an expansive biography of Thomas Müntzer (1489–1525), a radical figure of the German Reformation whom Martin Luther once called “Satan, a ...
Thomas Muntzer’s name is indelibly inscribed in the blood of the peasants who were slaughtered in the Peasants’ War of 1524-5 in Germany. The German revolutionary and bon vivant, Friedrich Engels, ...
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