Authors
Diarmaid MacCullochDimensions
168 x 244 x 55mm
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 the following two hundred years, the Western Christian world broke apart the nature not just of European religion but also of politics, thought, society and culture all changed utterly. The course of history down to our own time has been decisively shaped by this revolution.
MacCulloch examines the impact of the Reformation on everyday lives - on sex and love, on the changing sense of being a man and being a woman, on beliefs about life after death and punishment in this life, on belief in witches and ghosts. He shows the power of ideas to ruin lives and rebuild them: to bring hope, fear, love, hatred, laughter, anger and joy to the humblest as well as the most exalted places in our continent.