Skip to main content

The Reformation 1517 – 1648


The Reformation 1517 – 1648

This timeline details the main events of the Reformation and Counter Reformation in Europe 1517 – 1648
1516 (March)
Erasmus published new Greek and Latin versions of the New Testament
1517 (31st October)
Martin Luther made a protest against the Catholic practice of indulgences by nailing his 95 theses to the door of the castle church in Wittenberg
1520 (August)
Martin Luther published ‘To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation’. In this pamphlet Luther outlined the Christian priesthood and also denied the ability of the Pope to interpret the Bible.
1520 (October)
Martin Luther published ‘On the Babylonian Captivity of the Church’. In this pamphlet Luther discusses the seven sacraments of the Catholic Church and condemns the Catholic Church and the Pope.
1520 (November)
Martin Luther published ‘A Treatise On Christian Liberty’ sometimes referred to as ‘On the Freedom of a Christian Man’
1521 (January – May)
Diet of Worms
Martin Luther was summoned to answer questions before Charles V Holy Roman Emperor. He was charged with heresy and excommunicated by the Pope.
1521 (4th May)
Elector Frederick the Wise allowed Martin Luther to live at Wartburg Castle. He hoped that removing him from the limelight would reduce his popularity.
1521 (October)
King Henry VIII of England wrote ‘Septum Sacramentorum’. This pamphlet defended the Catholic Seven Sacraments against the attack made by Luther in ‘On the Babylonian Captivity of the Church’. The Pope gave King Henry the title ‘Fidei Defensor’ (Defendor of the Faith).
1522 (September)
Martin Luther completed his translation of the New Testament into German and the book was published.
1525 (3rd February)
The Anabaptist movement began. Anabaptists are Christians that believe that baptism should not occur until later in life when the subject is able to confess their sins. Anabaptists were disliked by both Catholics and Protestants.
1526 (during)
William Tynedale’s translation of the Bible into English was published.
1529 (1st – 4th October)
Marburg Colloquy
This was the name given to the meeting between Martin Luther and the Swiss reformer Ulrich Zwingli at Marburg Castle, Marburg, Hesse, Germany. The two attempted to find common ground in order to unify the Protestant movement but they were unable to settle their differences over the presence of Christ during Communion.
1530 (25th June)
Augsburg Confession
This was the name given to the 28 articles written in both German and Latin outlining Lutheran doctrine. The articles were presented to Holy Roman Emperor Charles V by Philip Melanchthon
1531 (11th October)
Ulrich Zwingli was killed during the battle of Kappel which was fought between the Catholic and Protestant Cantons in Switzerland.
1533 (23rd May)
In England the marriage of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon was declared void on the grounds of consanguinity and affinity. A passage in Leviticus which states “And if a man shall take his brother’s wife, it is an unclean thing: he hath uncovered his brother’s nakedness; they shall be childless”, together with the fact that only one child of their marriage had survived was given as evidence that the marriage was not legal in the eyes of God.
1533 (during)
Henry VIII was excommunicated by the Pope
1534 (3rd February)
Martin Luther published his six part German translation of the Bible
1534 (15th August)
The Society of Jesus, also known as the Jesuit Order, was founded by Ignatius Loyola. The male only order was a form of Catholicism.
1534 (November)
In England, the Act of Supremacy made King Henry VIII the head of the Church in England. All links with the Catholic Church were broken.
1535 (6th July)
In England, Thomas More, Lord Chancellor, was executed for refusing to accept King Henry VIII as head of the Church in England.
1536 (6th October)
William Tynedale was found guilty of heresy. He was tied to a stake, strangled then burnt.
1536 (during)
John Calvin published ‘Institutes of the Christian Religion’. This book defined Protestant religion according to Calvin (Calvinism). Divided into four sections the book defines – God the Father, the Son, the Holy Spirit and the Church.
1536 (11th March)
A bill was presented to the English Parliament which would, when passed, authorise the closure of all monasteries with a revenue of less than 200 pounds per year. About 376 monasteries fell into this category.
1542 (1st January)
The Jesuits were given control of the Spanish and Italian Inquisitions. Their aim was to remove non-Catholics either by forced recantation or death and re-affirm Catholicism.
1545 (December)
The Council of Trent sat for the first time. Called by Pope Paul III it was the 19th Ecumenical Council of the Catholic Church and sought to examine and clarify Catholic Doctrine. Protestantism was firmly repudiated and Catholic Doctrine clearly defined.
1546 (18th February)
Martin Luther died in Eisleben, Germany. He was aged 62.
1549 (15th January)
In England the Book of Common Prayer was introduced. Written in English by Thomas Cranmer the book outlined details of Anglican Services.
1553 (October)
Queen Mary I restored Catholicism to England.
1555 (25th September)
The Peace of Augsburg
This was a treaty made between Charles V (Holy Roman Emperor) and the Lutheran Schmalkaldic League whereby the Lutherans were granted toleration within the Holy Roman Empire.
1558 (during)
Queen Elizabeth I restored Protestantism to England
1559 (January)
John Knox helped to establish a Protestant Church of Scotland.
1560 (during)
The Geneva Bible was published. It was the first mechanically printed, mass produced bible. Printed in English it was compiled by a number of English scholars that had fled England under Mary I and sought refuge in Geneva, Switzerland.
1564 (27th May)
John Calvin died in Geneva, Switzerland
1598 (30th April)
King Henry IV of France granted toleration to the French Protestant Huguenots.
1611 (during)
The King James Bible was published. This bible was an English translation that was authorised by King James I to be used in England and Scotland.
1633 (January)
Galileo was declared a heretic for supporting the scientific theories of Copernicus.
1648 (October)
The Treaty of Westphalia
This ended the Thirty Years War and brought religious toleration to Europe.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

ဒီမိုကေရစီ နွင္. ခရစ္ယာန္က်င္.ဝတ္

ဒီမိုကေရစီ နွင္. ခရစ္ယာန္က်င္.ဝတ္ နိဒါန္း           ဒီမိုကေရစီရဲ  ့အဓိပၸယ္ဖြင့္ဆိုခ်က္မွာ ႏိုင္ငံသားတိုင္းတန္းတူ အခြင့္အေရးရရွိေရး၊ လြတ္လပ္စြာ ႏိုင္ငံေရးအၿမင္သေဘာထားမ်ားကို ေဖာ္ထုတ္ခြင့္၊ ေၿပာဆိုခြင့္ ေတြဟာ ႏိုင္ငံသားတိုင္းရဲ  ့အခြင့္အေရးၿဖစ္ သည္။ ဒီမုိကေရစီဆိုသည္မွာ လူအမ်ားစု၏ဆႏၵကိုလုပ္ေဆာင္ေပးသကဲ့သို ့ လူအနည္းစု၏ အက်ိဳးသေဘာ အခြင့္အလမ္းတို ့ကိုလည္းမထိခိုက္ေစပဲ တန္းတူလုပ္ေဆာင္ေသာ အရာၿဖစ္သည္။  ဒီမိုကေရစီဟူသည္ ၿပည္သူတို ့၏ အုပ္စိုးမႈ ့ၿဖစ္သည္။ ဒီမိုကေရစီ ႏိုင္ငံမ်ားတြင္ အခ်ဳပ္အၿခာအာဏာကို ၿပည္သူတို ့ပိုင္ဆိုင္၍၊ ၿပည္သူသည္ အစိုးရႏွင့္ လြတ္ေတာ္တို ့၏ အထက္တြင္ရွိသည္။ ဒီမိုကေရစီႏိုင္ငံတြင္ လူသား၏ လြတ္လပ္ ခြင့္မ်ားကို ကာကြယ္ေစာင့္ေရွာက္သည့္ မႈဝါဒမ်ား ခ်မွတ္ထားၿပီး၊ ၎အတိုင္း လက္ေတြ ့ေဆာင္ရြက္သည္။  တစ္နည္းေၿပာေသာ္ လြတ္လပ္ခြင့္ကို လူ ့အဖဲြ ့အစည္း၏ အမွတ္လကၡဏာ တစ္ရပ္ၿဖစ္ေအာင္ ထံုးဓေလ့အ စဥ္အလာမ်ား အားၿဖင့္အခိုင္အမာၿပဳၿခင္းၿဖစ္သည္။ ၎ကို ဒီမိုကေရစီဟုေခၚသည္။ ခရစ္ယာန္က်င့္ဝတ္         ...

Genesis By Walter Brueggemann

The first book in the Bible; it is the narrative account of beginnings—of the world, of the community of Israel , of faith. It is a theo­logical statement, claiming that all real begin­nings are wrought by the purpose and speech of Yahweh, the God of Israel. Content The beginnings concern the theologi­cal ground of the created world and the origin of Israel among the peoples of the world. Gen. 1-11 is a collection of materials presenting a particu­lar notion of the character of the cosmos. It is clear that while Israel borrows and utilizes the common deposit of ancient Near Eastern tradi­tions in this material, Israel has shaped these appropriated materials to make a particular statement about the character of the world in relation to God. This statement does not concern scientific origins. It asserts that the world is formed by, accountable to, and destined for Yahweh's purposes but is recalcitrant, refusing to be God's obedient creature. The narrative concerns...
ရွင္ေပါလု၏ အေရးအသားမ်ား၌ေတြ႕ရိွရေသာ ခရစ္ေတာ္ေဗဒဆိုင္ရာ ေဖာ္ျပခ်က္မ်ား (Pauline Christology) ဆရာသက္ေမာင္ဦး သခင္ေယ႐ႈကိုခရစ္ေတာ္ဘုရားျဖစ္ေတာ္မႈျခင္းအသံုးအႏႈန္းမ်ား (Christological vocabulary) ကိုယံုၾကည္သူမ်ားအားေဖၚျပရာ၌ရွင္ေပါလု၏အေရးအသားမ်ားမတိုင္မီကပင္ေတြ႕ရိွႏိုင္သည္။ ရွင္ေပါလု ကဤအသံုးမႏႈန္းမ်ားကိုေယဘုယ်အားျဖင့္ ယံုၾကည္သူစာဖတ္ပရိတ္သတ္မ်ား နားလည္သေဘာေပါက္ႏိုင္ ရန္အတြက္သံုးႏႈန္းေဖၚျပထားျခင္းျဖစ္သည္။ ထို႔အတူရွင္ေပါလု၏စာေစာင္မ်ား၌ သခင္ေယ႐ႈအားေဖၚျပ ထားေသာအသံုးအႏႈန္းမ်ားသည္ သူ၏စာေပေရးသားျခင္းဆိုင္ရာထူးခၽြန္မႈကိုလည္းေဖၚျပေနပါသည္။ သခင္ ေယ႐ႈအား ဘုရားျဖစ္ေတာ္မႈျခင္း ဆိုင္ရာတင္ျပျခင္းအသံုးအႏႈန္းမ်ားကို ေလ့လာရျခင္းျဖင့္ကနဦးအသင္း ေတာ္တြင္းရိွဓမၼအေတြးအေခၚ တိုးတက္လာျခင္းႏွင့္စာေစာင္မ်ားကိုမေရးသားမီရွင္ေပါလု၏သခင္ေယ႐ႈအ ေပၚ ထင္ျမင္ျခင္းကိုလည္းေလ့လာေတြ႕ရိွႏိုင္ပါသည္။           ရွင္ေပါလုသည္ ရွင္ျပန္ထေျမာက္ေတာ္မႈေသာခရစ္ေတာ္ကိုဒမသက္ၿမိဳ႕သို႔သြားေသာလမ္းေပၚ၌ ေတြ႕ႀကံဳခဲ့ရသည္။ ဤအေတြ႕အၾကံဳအားျဖင့္ သခင္ေယ႐ႈကိုနားလည္ျခင္းေျပာင္းလဲခဲ့ရပါသည္။ သူ၏ ေျပာင္းလ...