Description
In this brilliant work of historical excavation, Andrew Drummond charts the life and times of the man Martin Luther denounced as a 'Ravening Wolf' and 'False Prophet'. Drummond shows us Muntzer as a human being. Far from the bloodthirsty devil of legend, he was a man of considerable learning and principle, deeply sympathetic to the misery of the peasantry and the poor. In his short life - he was beheaded at thirty-five - Muntzer promised to fundamentally upend German society.
Seeking to save Muntzer from the condescension of history, Drummond guides us through the religious and political disputes of the Reformation, placing his life and thought in the context of those turbulent years. The result is a portrait of an often contradictory but always radical figure, one who continues to inspire movements of the poor across the globe.
Thomas Muntzer: radical millenarian preacher, revolutionary, iconoclast
About the Author
Andrew Drummond is a historian, novelist and translator based in Edinburgh. He is the author of four novels and, more recently, a biography of the eighteenth-century adventurer Maurice Benyovszky, as well as an account of attempts to extend rail connections to the north-west Highlands of Scotland.
Reviews
At last - a new account for our times of Thomas Muntzer, theologian and revolutionary. Drummond brings Muntzer and his world vividly to life. He shows us just why Muntzer hated Luther, and how he came to take up arms. What did it mean to be a revolutionary in sixteenth-century Germany? - Drummond shows us. You will be gripped and inspired by this exciting story - I couldn't put it down. -- Lyndal Roper, Regius Professor of History at Oxford, and author of Martin Luther: Renegade and Prophet
Posterity has endorsed not just Luther's victory but also his determined character assassination of his rival. Andrew Drummond's scholarly but eminently readable, thoughtful, thorough and at times witty biography of Muntzer redresses the balance for English-speaking audiences -- Professor Michael Russell, University of Glasgow
Among the famous figures associated with 16th century Germany, that of religious thinker and social revolutionary Thomas Muntzer deserves to be far better known. Andy Drummond's excellent, brilliantly written and entertaining, new biography delves deep into the archival material to draw out the history of a radical whose life is often obscured by propaganda and myth. As we approach the 500th anniversary of Muntzer's execution, this book is the definitive account of his life. -- Martin Empson, author of 'Kill all the Gentlemen': Class Struggle and Change in the English Countryside
A blisteringly good book about personal enmity, and the difference between revolution and reform. -- Daniel Brooks * Telegraph *
Drummond's marvellous romp of a biography - part jolly Simon Winder-like deep dive into 16th-century Germania, part sagacious reflection on the Reformation in the manner of Diarmaid MacCulloch - aims to free Muntzer from his detractors. -- Stuart Jeffries * Spectator *
Drummond's biography of this volatile and subversive thinker is both highly readable and carefully researched. -- Peter Marshall * Literary Review *
Andrew Drummond's skeptical and compassionate biography documents a life that is as much a warning as an inspiration to the modern left. Its evocative, exquisitely detailed panorama of Reformation Germany leads us to reflect on the tangled links between religious zeal and the successful exercise of political power. -- Michael Ledger-Lomas * Jacobin *
Book Information
ISBN 9781839768941
Author Andrew Drummond
Format Hardback
Page Count 384
Imprint Verso Books
Publisher Verso Books
Weight(grams) 538g