
Start the Week Histories, emotions and identity
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Dec 8, 2025 Join three remarkable guests discussing deep historical and emotional themes. Lyndal Roper dives into the German Peasants' War, uncovering how radical ideas fueled this uprising and shaped collective identity. Hannah Durkin shares poignant stories of the last captives of the Atlantic slave trade, emphasizing the importance of centering enslaved voices. Masud Husain explores how neurological changes can redefine personal identity, offering insights through patient narratives. Together, they weave a rich dialogue on history, memory, and dignity.
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Print And Religion Fueled Mass Revolt
- The 1524–25 Peasants' War scaled from local grievances into a mass movement shaped by printed pamphlets like the Twelve Articles.
- Print and shared religious language turned scattered complaints into a coherent political demand for freedom.
Theology Became A Political Claim
- The Twelve Articles mixed religious and socio-economic demands, framing freedom through Christ's blood to challenge serfdom.
- For peasants, theological language provided a moral claim against being owned and unequal feudal obligations.
Snail Shells As A Spark
- A likely spark of revolt was a lord ordering peasant women to collect snail shells during harvest, a humiliating and irrational demand.
- That myth captured the cumulative weight of intrusive feudal demands and helped symbolise the uprising's origins.





