Scott Hendrix, “Rerooting the Faith”  We shall discuss the article in small groups in class.  Google Lucas Cranach, “The Vineyard of the Lord” (1569)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
16 th Century religious reform movement Led to new Christian sects not answerable to the Pope Also known as the PROTESTANT REFORMATION.
Advertisements

Section 3.15 The Disintegration and Reconstruction of France.
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648). Civil War In France ( )
 Huguenots- (French Protestants)- watched by French monarchs as early as 1520 when protestant ideas arrived in France  Huguenot persecution became policy.
Wars, Rebellion, and the Rise of Nation States History 103 The West and the World.
Political Divisions & Religious Warfare I HST 311.
Wars of Religion Libertyville HS.
Constitutional Struggles of the Seventeenth Century
The French Monarchy Chapter 19:iii France was divided between Catholic and Huguenot- dominated areas by the late-1500s.
The Disintegration and Reconstruction of France
THE AGE OF RELIGIOUS WARS. FRANCE: CHAOS & VIOLENCE  Lack of centralized government  No control over military forces  Fractured religiously.
Europe In Crisis: Wars of Religion Section 1 Religious & political conflicts between Catholic & Protestant in Europe.
Chapter ’s and 1600’s Catholic Church set out to defeat Protestantism and convince people to return to the Church This triggered a series of bloody.
THE RELIGIOUS WARS: The French Wars of Religion c
French Wars of Religion
French Wars of Religion
Wars of Religion.
French Wars of Religion: Review: Europe after the Reformation  N. Europe mainly Protestant (Scandinavia / England / N. Germany / parts of.
Wars of Religion. Key Terms  Peace of Augsburg (1555)  Edward VI (r )  Lady Jane Grey  Mary I (r )  Peace of Augsburg (1555)
Chapter 8.3: The Counter Reformation Ignatius of Loyola and the Jesuits: “Agents of the Pope”
Wars of Religion.
Results of the Reformation
Spanish Possessions of Habsburgs under Philip II.
Chapter 17 Sec. 4: Catholics & Protestants I.Counter- Reformation A.Under Pope Paul III, the Catholic Church began reform at the council at Trent, near.
 “War is one of the scourges with which it has pleased God to afflict men.”- Cardinal Richelieu ( )  War was a fact of everyday life.
The Protestant and Catholic- Reformations. II. The Spread of Protestantism A. John Calvin 1. Huldrych Zwingli 2. Predestination 3. The Geneva Government.
A History of Western Society Eleventh Edition CHAPTER 13 Reformations and Religious Wars 1500–1600 Copyright © 2014 by Bedford/St. Martin’s John P. McKay.
The European Age of Religious Wars ( ) European Religious Divisions – 16 th 17 th century.
Chapter 11, Lesson 4 Catholics & Protestants
The Valois, et al. Some Geneology Chenonceux.
Chapter 11, Lesson 4 Catholics & Protestants It Matters Because: The struggle between Catholics & Protestants during the Reformation shaped the churches.
In general, states in the northern Europe became Protestant while those in the South remain Catholic and in both cases royal authority increased at the.
 Read the Peace of Augsburg primary source (in your drive) and answer the questions that accompany it.
The Reformation Time of “REFORM” or change in the church I. The 1 st Protestants 1. Martin Luther (1517) 1. Martin Luther (1517) a. Ninety-Five Thesis.
AP European History Religious and Civil War in France
Monarchs of Europe: France. Religious Wars and Henry IV By the 1560’s 10% of France were Huguenots – French Protestants In 1562 a civil war began between.
Religious Wars have a political impact! War of three Henrys, Protestant Revolts, 30 Years War.
Protestant Reformation Catholic Reformation Belief that religion and politics go together Religious Wars in Europe.
Chapter 12, Section 3. Religious Division By the 1600s, almost all of southern Europe was Catholic, and the majority of northern Europe was Protestant.
French Wars of Religion #3 To what extent do political authorities influence the course of the Protestant Reformation? #8 Discuss the relationship.
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648)
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648)
Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley H. S. Chappaqua, NY
Age of Absolutism.
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648)
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648)
The Reformation World History II.
Politics and the Wars of Religion in the Sixteenth Century
DIET????  A formal general assembly of the princes or estates of the Holy Roman Empire.
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648)
The Religious Wars.
The Counter-Reformation and Wars of Religion
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648)
French Wars of Religion
The French Wars of Religion Part 2
Religious Wars of Europe
Chapter 12: The Wars of Religion
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648)
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648)
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648)
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648).
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648).
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648)
HOMEWORK PAGES REFORMATION #2.
Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley H. S. Chappaqua, NY
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648)
Religious Wars.
Religious Wars have a political impact!
REFORMATION HOMEWORK HW#1 Quarter 4
The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648)
Presentation transcript:

Scott Hendrix, “Rerooting the Faith”  We shall discuss the article in small groups in class.  Google Lucas Cranach, “The Vineyard of the Lord” (1569) to look at the image. We shall discuss its meaning. Hendrix refers to the painting.  echoes: O’Malley’s discussion of christianitas; confessionalization;  an adumbration: the success or failure of the Reformation (575-76)

Scott Hendrix, “Rerooting the Faith”  Small group discussion:  “Given all the disagreements that emerged among Protestants as well as the disputes that continued between Protestants and Catholics, is it possible to speak meaningfully of one Reformation with a common agenda?” (568)  How does Hendrix answer his own question? What reasons does he give for his answer? Do you agree with him after learning about the Reformation from MacCulloch?

Central Europe: Religion Contested  The Empire and Habsburg Lands: A Shattered Church  Habsburgs, Wittelsbachs and a Catholic Recovery  Transylvania: A Reformed Israel  France: Collapse of a Kingdom,  France: A Late Counter-Reformation

The Empire and Habsburg Lands: A Shattered Church Albert of Austria Isabella of Spain = the Archdukes of the Spanish Netherlands

The Empire and Habsburg Lands: A Shattered Church  “entrenched Protestant strength” (445)  50 / 65 Free Imperial Cities  German bishops  Ecclesiastical Reservation  Collegium Germanicum (1552)  Gregory XIII: Collegium Germanicum et Hungaricum de Urbe (1580)

Habsburgs, Wittelsbachs and a Catholic Recovery  agreement in Munich, 1579: Wilhelm V, Archdukes of Austria: Ferdinand and Karl  Pacification of Graz (1572)  attrition  reformation commissions  Conflict in Cologne,  Ecclesiastical Reservation (1555)  Gebhard Truchsess von Walburg  Ernst the pluralist

Habsburgs, Wittelsbachs and a Catholic Recovery  Intensification of Catholic piety  relics  cult of Mary  rosary  Take a tour of St. Michael’s, the Jesuit Church in Munich. Click on the link below: muenchen.de/fileadmin/Redaktion/Kirche/Panorama/index.ht ml

Transylvania: A Reformed Israel  Transylvanian Reformed Protestantism  remoteness  Academy of Gyulaférvár (1622)  distinctiveness  “Puritan-conformist convulsions” (461)

France: Collapse of a Kingdom,  Huguenots and royal policy  the Guises and the Catholic League  triumph of Henry of Navarre = Henry IV  Edict of Nantes (1598)  religious rights  civic rights  political rights  fortified towns  fall of La Rochelle (1628)  Revocation of the Edict of Nantes (1685)

War of the Three Henries: Henry of Guise, Henry III, Henry of Navarre

France: A Late Counter-Reformation  three isms: Gallicanism, Jansenism, ultramontanism  French bishops; influence of Carlo Borromeo  spiritual directions  Bishop François de Sales  Cardinal Pierre de Bérulle  Vincent de Paul, Congregation of the Mission  Cornelius Jansen, Augustinus

Identifications  Gregory XIII, Collegium Germanicum, Wittelsbachs, Mariazell, Henri III, Ligue (aka Catholic League), Henri of Navarre, Henri of Guise, politiques, Edict of Nantes (1598), Huguenots, François de Sales, Jane Frances de Chantal, Pierre de Bérulle, Vincent de Paul, Jansenism, Molinism, ultramontanism