Reformation : Europe's house divided, 1490-1700

"The Reformation and the Counter-Reformation it provoked are one of the great discontinuities in European and world history. The dramatic changes that began when Martin Luther proclaimed his ninety-five theses in Wittenberg in 1517 were of a different order to anything that had gone before. In... Full description

Main Author: MacCulloch, Diarmaid.
Published: London : Penguin, 2004
Series: Penguin History
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Table of Contents:
  • Part I. A common culture. 1. The old Church, 1490-1517. 2. Hopes and fears, 1490-1517. 3. New heaven: new earth, 1517-24. 4. Wooing the magistrate, 1524-40. 5. Reunion deferred: Catholic and Protestant, 1530-60. 6. Reunion scorned, 1547-70. 7. The new Europe defined, 1569-72. 8. The North: Protestant heartlands. 9. The South: Catholic heartlands. 10. Central Europe: religion contested. 11. 1618-48: decision and destruction. 12. Coda: a British legacy, 1600-1700. Part III. Patterns of Life. 13. Changing times. 14. Death, life and discipline. 15. Love and sex: staying the same. 16. Love and sex: moving on. 17. Outcomes.

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