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The German Peasants' War and Anabaptist Community of Goods

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James Stayer argues that Anabaptist community of goods continued the popular radicalism of the early Reformation and the Peasants' War of 1525. During the German Reformation hundreds of thousands o...
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  • 10 January 1994
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James Stayer argues that Anabaptist community of goods continued the popular radicalism of the early Reformation and the Peasants' War of 1525. During the German Reformation hundreds of thousands of commoners were mobilized by the hope that established clerical and aristocratic order could be replaced by justice and equity based on the divine law of the Bible. After the defeat of the commoners in the Peasants' War, some of the most ardent adherents of social and religious reform attempted to achieve these same aspirations by trying to implement the apostolic model of Acts 2 and 4 through the Anabaptists. Thus, as Stayer reveals, the Peasants' War was an essential formative experience for many of the original leaders of Anabaptism.

In the late 1520s persecution drove many Anabaptists to Moravia where, throughout the sixteenth century, they continued the commoners' resistance to privilege in church and state. Stayer argues that in Münster, however, where there had been no Peasants' War and where urban notables were prominent in the Anabaptist leadership, Anabaptist communism was badly corrupted. The historical continuities which Stayer establishes between the Peasants' War and Anabaptism in Switzerland, south Germany, and Moravia can in part explain this contrast.

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Price: $37.95
Pages: 258
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Series: McGill-Queen's Studies in the History of Religion
Publication Date: 10 January 1994
ISBN: 9780773511828
Format: Paperback
BISACs: RELIGION / History
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"This work ... by one of the most eminent historians of the radical Reformation, will doubtless provoke controversy in this busy area of scholarship." Michael Mullet, European History Quarterly. "Stayer offers a provocative and far-reaching revision of the existing picture of Anabaptism ... by setting out the case for the concept of the community of goods as the common source of their religious and social beliefs." Alexander Cowan, Journal of Ecclesiastical History. "A tour de force ... Stayer is one of the most scrupulously careful historians in sixteenth-century studies today ... Stayer's theme of unity may indeed ... signal a movement toward the search for synthesis among Anabaptists, based as much on socio-religious grounds as on theology." John Oyer, Goshen College, Indiana.
James M. Stayer is Professor of History, Queen's University.