ABSTRACT

First published in 1968. It can hardly be denied that the men who have most changed history have been the great religious leaders. Among the great prophets, and, with the possible exception of Calvin, the last of world-wide importance, Martin Luther has taken his place. His career marks the beginning of the present epoch, for it is safe to say that every man in western Europe and in America is leading a different life to-day from what he would have led and is another person altogether from what he would have been, had Martin Luther not lived. Granting, as axiomatic, that essential factors of the movement are to be found in the social, political, and cultural conditions of the age, and in the work of predecessors and followers, in short, in the environment which alone made Luther's lifework possible, there must still remain a very large element due directly and solely to his personality. The present work aims to explain that personality; to show him in the setting of his age; to indicate what part of his work is to be attributed to his inheritance and to the events of the time, but especially to reveal that part of the man which seems, at least, to be explicable by neither heredity nor environment, and to be more important than either, the character, or individuality.

chapter I|7 pages

Childhood and Student Life. 1483-1505

chapter II|8 pages

The Monk. 1505-1512

chapter IV|18 pages

The Professor. 1512 - 1517

chapter V|22 pages

The Indulgence Controversy. 1517-1519

chapter VI|13 pages

The Leipsic Debate. 1519

chapter VII|7 pages

The Patriot. 1519-1520

chapter X|20 pages

The diet of worms. 1521

chapter XI|16 pages

The wartburg. may 4, 1521 - march 1, 1522

chapter XIII|10 pages

Carlstadt and Mxjnzer. 1522-1525

chapter XIV|11 pages

The Peasants' Revolt. 1525

chapter XV|16 pages

Catharine Von Bora

chapter XVI|10 pages

Private Life. 1522-1531

chapter XVII|7 pages

Henry VIII

chapter XVIII|17 pages

Erasmus

chapter XIX|15 pages

German Politics. 1522-1529

chapter XX|9 pages

Church Building

chapter XXI|15 pages

Ulrich Zwingli

chapter XXII|18 pages

Feste Coburg and the DIET of Augsburg. 1530

chapter XXIII|8 pages

The German Bible

chapter XXIV|8 pages

The Religious Peace of Nuremberg. 1532

chapter XXV|11 pages

The Church Militant

chapter XXVI|8 pages

The Wittenberg Agreement. 1536

chapter XXVIII|13 pages

The League of Schmalkalden. 1535-1539

chapter XXIX|15 pages

Character and Habits

chapter XXX|5 pages

At Work

chapter XXXI|15 pages

Religion and Culture

chapter XXXII|12 pages

The Luther Family

chapter XXXIII|12 pages

Domestic Economy

chapter XXXIV|16 pages

The Bigamy of Philip of Hesse. 1540

chapter XXXV|17 pages

Catholic and Protestant. 1539-1546

chapter XXXVI|7 pages

Lutheran and Sacramentarian. 1539-1546

chapter XXXVII|17 pages

Death