The Peace
of Augsburg brought peace but did not settle the religious
disagreements in Germany. For one thing, its signatories did
not recognize Calvinism, a relatively stringent form of
Protestantism that was gaining prominence around the time
the Augsburg treaty was signed, in what has been called the
Second Reformation. Adherents to both Calvinism and
Lutheranism worked to spread their influence and gain
converts in the face of the Counter-Reformation, the attempt
of the Roman Catholic Church to regroup and reverse the
spread of Protestantism. Followers of all three religions
were at times successful, but only at the expense of the
others. Fear of
religious subversion caused rulers to monitor the conduct of
their subjects more closely. Attempting to help the modern
reader understand the intensity and pervasiveness of this
fear, Mary Fulbrook, a noted British historian of Germany,
has likened it to the anxiety prevailing in the first years
of the Cold War. An example of the social paranoia
engendered by the religious tensions of the period is
Protestant Germany's refusal until 1700 to accept the
Gregorian calendar introduced by the papacy in 1582 because
the reform entailed a one-time loss of the days between
October 5 and 14. Many Protestants suspected that Roman
Catholics were attempting somehow to steal this time for
themselves. By the
first decades of the seventeenth century, religious
controversy had become so obstructive that at times the
Reichstag could not conduct business. In 1608, for example,
Calvinists walked out of the body, preventing the levying of
a tax to fight a war against the Turks. In the same year,
the Evangelical Union was established by a few states and
cities of the empire to defend the Protestant cause. In 1609
a number of Roman Catholic states countered by forming the
Catholic League. Although both bodies were less concerned
with a sectarian war than with the specific aims of their
member states, their formation was an indication of how
easily disputes could acquire a religious aspect.
Library of Congress Country Study The
Counter-Reformation and Religious Tensions
Library of Congress Country Study
This document is in the public domain. You may copy, download, print and distribute this work as you see fit.Every effort has been made to present this text accurately and cleanly, but no guarantees are made against errors. Neither Melissa Snell nor About.com may be held liable for any problems you experience with the text version or with any electronic form of the document.
More at the Medieval History Site
Site
Map
FAQs
Quizzes
Reviews
Daily
Features
More about the Knightly Newsletter

