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500 Years Ago

Posted: Sun Oct 29, 2017 12:53 pm
by Vonz90
..... Martin Luther nailed the 95 Thesis to a church door that served as the bulletin board for the seminary he taught at ...... Happy Reformation Day

(Celebrated today - actually happened on the 31st)

Re: 500 Years Ago

Posted: Sun Oct 29, 2017 6:41 pm
by Steamforger
Eddie Izzards "Eine minute, bitte" about this moment and the break from Cathol was pretty funny.

Re: 500 Years Ago

Posted: Sun Oct 29, 2017 9:17 pm
by Netpackrat
Thus kicking off centuries' worth of bloodshed and upheaval...

Re: 500 Years Ago

Posted: Sun Oct 29, 2017 9:18 pm
by Rich
Herr Luther, meet Herr Gutenberg's legacy.

Re: 500 Years Ago

Posted: Sun Oct 29, 2017 10:44 pm
by Langenator
Actually, Gutenberg preceded Luther by many decades (1440s for Gutenberg).

So when Luther decided to translate the Bible into Hochdeutsch, the method of distribution already existed.

What is somewhat underappreciated is the effect this had on increasing literacy in the European population.

Re: 500 Years Ago

Posted: Mon Oct 30, 2017 12:11 am
by blackeagle603
And to think he imagined it was just going to spark a thoughtful collegial debate... /heh/

Re: 500 Years Ago

Posted: Mon Oct 30, 2017 12:55 am
by First Shirt
Read somewhere, recently, that the Reformation survived because of Luther's wife. She started a vegetable garden to feed the students that they took in as boarders, and then expanded to raising sheep, cattle, and hogs. Pretty soon, they had a full-fledged business going, selling the excess to local merchants.

Her efforts enabled them to live pretty well, despite the Catholic churches efforts against them.

Wish I could find the article, it was a pretty good one.

Re: 500 Years Ago

Posted: Mon Oct 30, 2017 1:33 am
by Vonz90
Langenator wrote:Actually, Gutenberg preceded Luther by many decades (1440s for Gutenberg).

So when Luther decided to translate the Bible into Hochdeutsch, the method of distribution already existed.

What is somewhat underappreciated is the effect this had on increasing literacy in the European population.
It is unlikely the Reformation would have taken off the way it did without the printing press. There was about a fifty year stretch where the majority of all of the books printed in Europe were written by Luther and a big part of the remainder were books arguing that Luther was wrong.

And of course he was the first to advocate universal education (for boys and girls) since he advocated "Sola scriptura" so it became a religious duty to educate one's children.

By the way, he also invented Hochdeutsch as an amalgamation of the different German dialects.

Cool stuff

Re: 500 Years Ago

Posted: Mon Oct 30, 2017 12:27 pm
by Langenator
Lest anyone lose sight of Luther's acid tongue: http://ergofabulous.org/luther/

Re: 500 Years Ago

Posted: Mon Oct 30, 2017 5:03 pm
by Rich
Langenator wrote:Actually, Gutenberg preceded Luther by many decades (1440s for Gutenberg).

So when Luther decided to translate the Bible into Hochdeutsch, the method of distribution already existed.

What is somewhat underappreciated is the effect this had on increasing literacy in the European population.
Thanks, edited original post to fix it.