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The German Reformation, 1517-63

5. Does the Reformation still matter today?

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About this Lecture

Lecture

In this final module, we think about the impact of the Reformation today, from the continued operation of the Lutheran churches in Germany and the rest of the world, as well the continued tensions in some areas of the world between Protestants and Catholics.

Further Resources for the Study of the German Reformation:

(i) Primary Materials
- Th. Brady et. al. (eds.), German History in Documents and Images: 1500-1648 (2009)
- M. Luther, Works (American edn, 55 vols, 1958-86)
- Project Wittenberg: writings by Protestant reformers
- G. Strauss (ed.), Manifestations of Discontent … on the Eve of the Reformation (1971)

(ii) Secondary Literature
P. Blickle, Communal Reformation: The Quest for Salvation in Sixteenth-Century Germany, trans. Th. Dunlap (1992)
H. Cohn, ‘The Long Reformation – Lutheran’, in B. Kümin (ed.), The European World 1500-1800: An Introduction to Early Modern History (2nd edn, 2014)
S. Dixon, The Reformation in Germany (2002) & Contesting the Reformation (2012)
M. Forster, Catholic Revival in the Age of the Baroque (2001)
B. Moeller, Imperial Cities and the Reformation: Three Essays (1972)
U. Rublack, The Reformation in Europe (Cambridge, 2005)

(iii) Film
‘Luther’, directed by Eric Till (DVD, 2003) [Trailer]

Course

In this course, Professor Beat Kümin (University of Warwick) explores the German Reformation. He begins by looking at the causes of the Reformation, before thinking about the role of Martin Luther himself, wider socio-cultural consequences, the reaction of the Catholic Church in response to the Protestant movement, and finally the impact of the Reformation on Europe today.

Lecturer

Beat Kümin is Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Warwick, having joined Warwick's History Department in January 2001.

Beat read History and English at the University of Bern, before conducting doctoral research on 'The Late Medieval English Parish' at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge (PhD 1993). As a Research Fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge (1993-97), he served as Director of Studies in History in 1996, before returning to Bern to pursue a Swiss National Science Foundation project on early modern public houses.

Since joining the History Department at Warwick, he has obtained a second doctorate (Habilitation in early modern history; Bern 2005), held a guest lectureship at Bielefeld University (2011-12) and spent six months as a Senior Fellow at the Alfried Krupp Wissenschaftskolleg in Greifswald (2012-13; blog). In 2014, he directed Warwick's Centre for the Study of the Renaissance and in the summer term of 2015 took up a guest professorship at Konstanz.

Beat is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and co-editor of Bloomsbury's 'Cultures of Early Modern Europe' series. Alongside this, he serves on the boards of the Centre for the Study of Christianity and Culture at the University of York, the Journal of Baroque Studies, Brewery History and the Warwickshire Local History Society. Involvement in other scholarly bodies includes the German History Society (Committee Member 2005-8), the Drinking Studies Network and the Warwick Network for Parish Research. In 2014, he was appointed a federal expert for heritage of the Swiss Department of Culture.

Among other publications, Beat has written The Communal Age in Western Europe c.1100-1800: Towns, Villages and Parishes in Pre-Modern Society (Palgrave, 2013) and edited The European World 1500-1800: An Introduction to Early Modern History (2nd edn, Routledge, 2014).

Cite this Lecture

APA style

Kümin, B. (2018, August 15). The German Reformation, 1517-63 - Does the Reformation still matter today? [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://massolit.io/courses/the-german-reformation-1517-63/does-the-reformation-still-matter-today

MLA style

Kümin, B. "The German Reformation, 1517-63 – Does the Reformation still matter today?." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 15 Aug 2018, https://massolit.io/courses/the-german-reformation-1517-63/does-the-reformation-still-matter-today