D. The German Peasants’ War, 1525
- 1. Causes
- German peasants originally supported Luther. They heard his message as one that promised freedom from oppression by the landlords and the clergy.
- Complaints that nobles had seized village common lands and imposed exorbitant rents soon escalated to open attacks on monasteries, castles, and prosperous farms.
- 2. Luther’s response
- The peasants believed Luther would support them.
- Luther, however, believed that Christians ought to obey their rulers – even unjust rulers – and that rebellion against the state was always wrong and must be crushed.
- Horrified at the prospect of a bloody revolution, Luther urged the German nobility to crush the rebels.
- 3. Consequences
- The German Peasants’ War of 1525 strengthened the authority of the German nobility.
- Lutheranism became closely allied with the established political order controlled by the German nobility.
NOTE: It is easy to focus on Luther’s dramatic stand against indulgences while ignoring his response to the German Peasants’ War. Don’t make this mistake. The German Peasants’ War has been featured on several multiple-choice questions and was the topic of the 2008 DBQ (see Chapter 27). In addition, It can be used in free-response essay questions discusslng the political and social consequences of the Protestant Reformation.