Description
About the Author
Martin Christ is a historian of early modern Europe, with a particular interest in the religious, cultural, and social history of Bohemia and Germany. He holds a DPhil from the University of Oxford after previously studying at the universities of Warwick, St. Andrews, and Dresden. He has published in German and English on religious coexistence, Sorb history, and the Reformation in central Europe. After teaching at the University of Tubingen, he is currently working on a project on dying and commemoration in early modern Europe as part of the Humanities Centre for Advanced Studies: "Religion and Urbanity: Reciprocal Formations" at the Max-Weber-Kolleg of the University of Erfurt.
Reviews
This book is based in impressive archival and often obscure secondary materials and raises stimulating issues for future Reformation scholarship. * Paul W. Knoll, Austrian History Yearbook *
Reading [this monograph] is a real pleasure, but also productive: indeed, following the characters allows one to grasp the full range of ambiguities that also unfold at the individual level...The variety of cases and nuances discussed thus goes beyond this regional study, on the fringes of the Holy Roman Empire, to feed more general reflections on the malleability of confessions. * Christophe Duhamelle, Francia Recensio *
Martin Christ's monograph makes an important contribution to [the field of Reformation research] by bringing together the complex developments of the 16th century in a narrative that significantly, knowledgeably and convincingly enriches our understanding of the Reformation and its development in Upper Lusatia. * Friedrich Pollack, Letopis *
Christ's fascinating account highlights the creative as well as destructive consequences that followed from efforts to negotiate both the extent and limits of religious pluralism in Upper Lusatia. * Graeme Murdock, Trinity College Dublin, Huguenot Society Journal *
Christ follows his narrative through the biographies of eight remarkable, Lutheran and Catholic individuals [...] which he connects to nuanced analyses of the local and regional contexts. * Alexander Kastner, Historische Zeitschrift [TRANSLATED FROM GERMAN] *
The prose is smooth and readable. The author presents a compelling case for the complexities of the Reformation which must be understood not only from the perspectives of the rulers, advisors, and theological combatants, but also from lesser stately actors, like mayors and town councilors, and town populations. * Susan Mobley, Lutheran Quarterly *
This book is based in impressive archival and often obscure secondary materials and raises stimulating issues for future Reformation scholarship. * Paul W. Knoll, University of Southern California, Emeritus, Los Angeles, California 90007, USA *
Awards
Winner of Winner, Gerald Strauss Prize, Sixteenth Century Society Winner, REFORC Book Award 2022 Joint Winner, 2022 Ecclesiastical History Society Book Prize.
Book Information
ISBN 9780198868156
Author Martin Christ
Format Hardback
Page Count 288
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 586g
Dimensions(mm) 243mm * 163mm * 23mm