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Duke George of Saxony’s Letter to Henry VIII

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 April 2021

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Most serene lord King and honoured cousin, wishing you health and perpetual increase in all things good, and paying our due respects.

After Your Royal Highness recently sent us your Response to Martin Luther, to be forwarded to Luther himself, we decided that it would be a benefit to Christendom for it to be translated into our vernacular tongue. So we saw to it that this was carefully done. But Martin himself, impatient as he is of everything which is not on his side, because he felt that the common people might be persuaded by that translation that he had offered to recant, took from that – or rather concocted for himself – a reason for writing an answer, directed, however, not so much against your Response as against the title given to it in German, as though it had not been properly translated. Which, however, no one cognisant of the German language would ever say or establish, although we are not quite sure whether he actually took occasion for writing from the Latin title instead, which he might well have done with no less temerity and cavilling. But whatever the case, because we considered that his insolent rejoinder somewhat touched on Your Royal Highness's honour, we saw to it that this imposture of Luther should be not only now translated into Latin (for nothing is issued by him except in his mother tongue) but also set before the eyes of all the world by the translator of your Response. All of this we send to Your Royal Highness, and we pray that it will be received by you in the same spirit in which it has been sent by us. For even in much greater matters we would willingly oblige Your Royal Highness, and you may be absolutely sure of that and of us. Farewell, and may you ever flourish. From our palace at Dresden, on the eve of Reminiscere Sunday, 16 March, in the year of divine reconciliation 1527.

Signed: George, by the grace of God Duke of Saxony, Landgrave of Thuringia and Margrave of Meissen, etc.

Addressed: To the most Serene and Mighty Prince, Lord Henry, King of England and France, Defender of the Faith, and Lord of Ireland, his Lord and honoured Cousin.

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Henry VIII and Martin Luther
The Second Controversy, 1525–1527
, pp. 214 - 215
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2021

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