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The Urban Reformation and its Fate: Problems and Perspectives in the Consolidation of the German Protestant Movement

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

Christopher J. Burchill
Affiliation:
University of Edinburgh

Abstract

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Type
Review Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1984

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References

1 (Güitersloh, 1962). A translation by Midelfort, E. and Edwards, M. appears under the title Imperial cities and the Reformation: three essays (Philadelphia, 1972), pp. 41115Google Scholar. A survey of the literature is provided by Rublack, H.-C., ‘Forschungsbericht Stadt und Reformation’ Stadt und Kirche im 16. Jahrhundert ed. Moeller, B. (Güitersloh, 1978), pp. 926Google Scholar.

2 Ruling class, regime and Reformation in Strasbourg 1520–1555 (Leiden, 1978)Google Scholar. For the subsequent debate with Moeller see Stadtbürgertum und Adel in der Reformation / The Urban Classes, the Nobility and the Reformation: Studies on the Social History of the Reformation in England and Germany, ed. Mommsen, W. (Stuttgart, 1979), pp. 40–3Google Scholar.

3 The German nation and Martin Luther (London, 1974), p. 182Google Scholar.

4 Gescheiterte Reformation: Frühreformatorische und protestantische Bewegungen in süd- und west-deutscken Residmzen (Stuttgart, 1978)Google Scholar.

5 A valuable study on this point is provided by Maeder, K., Die Via Media in der schweizerischen Reformation: Studien zum Problem der Konlinuität im Zeitalter der Glaubensspaltung (Züurich, 1970)Google Scholar.

6 Here mention should also be made of the unpublished thesis of Abray, J., ‘The Long Reformation: magistrates, clergy and people in Strasbourg 1523–1598’ (Yale, 1978)Google Scholar, to which Chrisman provides adequate acknowledgement.

7 On these points see the rather confusing study of Weyrauch, E., Konfessionelle Krise und sociale Stabilität: das Interim in Strassburg (1548–1562) (Struttgart, 1978)Google Scholar.

8 The major recent study on Bucer, which confirms many of these points, is provided by the as yet unpublished dissertation of Hammann, G., ‘Martin Bucer, l' Église au coeur de la foi: fondements théologiques et développements pratiques de l'ecclésiologie du reformateur strasbourgeois 1523–1551’ (Strasbourg, 1982)Google Scholar.

9 See the discussion between Moeller, B., Ozment, S. and Scribner, R. in Stadtbürgertum und Add, ed. Mommsen, W., pp. 2540, 44–8Google Scholar.

10 For the sake of simple folk: popular propaganda for the German reformation (Cambridge, 1981)Google Scholar.

11 When fathers ruled: family life in reformation Europe (Harvard, 1983), pp. 149Google Scholar.

12 Luther's house of learning: indoctrination of the young in the German reformation (Baltimore, 1978), pp. 307–8Google Scholar. For a critical appraisal of this work see Kittelson, J., ‘Successes and failures in the German reformation: the report from Strasbourg’, Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte, LXXIII (1982), 153–75Google Scholar.

13 ‘Stadt und territoriale Konfessionsbildung’ in Kirche und gesellschaftlicher Wandel in deutschen und niederlädischen Städten der werdenden Neuzeit, ed. Petri, F. (Cologne, 1980), pp. 251–96Google Scholar.

14 Stadt und Kirche in Kitzingen: Darstellung und Quellen zu Spätmittelalter und Reformation (Stuttgart, 1978)Google Scholar.

15 There is still no authoritative study on the second reformation, though it has now become the subject of a growing interest. In this context mention should be made of Münch, P., Zucht und Ordnung: reformierte Kircherwerfassung im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert (Nassau-Dillenburg, Kurpfalz, Hessen-Kassel) (Stuttgart, 1978)Google Scholar.

16 See Schindling, A., Humanistische Hochschule und freie Reichsstadt: Gymnasium und Akademie in Strassburg 1538–1621 (Wiesbaden, 1977)Google Scholar. There is also a valuable collected volume of Beiträge zu Problemen deutschen Universitätsgründungen der frühen Neuzeit, ed. Baumgart, P. and Hammerstein, N. (Nendeln, 1978)Google Scholar.

17 Society and politics in Germany, 1500–1750 (London, 1974)Google Scholar.