
New Books in History Kenneth G. Appold, "Luther and the Peasants: Religion, Ritual, and the Revolt Of 1525" (Oxford UP, 2025)
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Oct 28, 2025 Kenneth G. Appold, a Reformation history expert at Princeton, dives into his book about the 1525 German Peasants' Revolt. He reveals how the uprising was marked by strong religious motivations rather than just socioeconomic strife. Appold highlights the peasants' demands in the Twelve Articles and discusses the role of clergy, such as Thomas Müntzer. He explores Luther's shifting responses, from initial support to calls for suppression, and emphasizes the peasants' commitment to peace and communal values. A refreshing angle on a pivotal moment in history!
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Reformation's Turning Moment
- The Peasants' Revolt marks a turning point where the Reformation shifts from popular movement to elite-backed project.
- Kenneth Appold argues this shift occurred largely because the revolt failed and Luther sided with princes.
Twelve Articles As A Theological Manifesto
- The Twelve Articles became a concise theological manifesto that peasants across regions adopted.
- The document paired economic demands with scripture and a plea to follow the gospel.
Not A Peasants' War
- The uprising wasn't a balanced conflict: peasants killed few while lords slaughtered many.
- Appold prefers 'revolt' or 'uprising' because 'war' mischaracterizes the one-sided massacres.

