German Histories in the Age of Reformations, 1400–1650

Author:   Thomas A. Brady Jr. (University of California, Berkeley)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9780511627026


Publication Date:   05 June 2012
Format:   Undefined
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German Histories in the Age of Reformations, 1400–1650


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Author:   Thomas A. Brady Jr. (University of California, Berkeley)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press (Virtual Publishing)
ISBN:  

9780511627026


ISBN 10:   0511627025
Publication Date:   05 June 2012
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  General
Format:   Undefined
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Part I. The Empire and the German Lands: 1. Reformations in German histories; 2. Shapes of the German lands; 3. Temporal estates - farmers, traders, fighters; 4. The church and the faith; Part II. Reform of Empire and Church, 1400–1520: 5. Reform of empire and church; 6. The empire and the territorial states; 7. The reform of the empire in the age of Maximilian; 8. Ideals and illusions of reforming the church; Part III. Church, Reformations, and Empire, 1520–76: 9. Urban reformations; 10. Revolution of the common man; 11. Imperial reformations in the age of Charles V; 12. Imperial peace, 1555–80; Part IV. Confessions, Empire, and War, 1576–1650: 13. Forming the Protestant confessions; 14. Reforming the Catholic church; 15. Limits of public life - Jews, heretics, witches; 16. Roads to war; 17. The Thirty Years War; 18. German reformations, German futures.

Reviews

'This extraordinary book provides the reader with the best account of late medieval and early modern German history available in any language ... This is a post-confessional history in which religion retains its centrality but not its polemical edge, a modern history that has been released from the shackles of modernization, and a history in which ordinary villagers and townsmen take their places in a story that was most often dictated by princes and nobles. And it is a story with a powerful narrative arc. What an achievement.' H. C. Erik Midelfort, University of Virginia 'A commanding and brilliant view of the Reformation era. This masterful book is the new starting point for anyone seeking a fresh and up-to-date understanding of the Germanies, the reformations in religion, and the religious confessions linking the early modern and modern worlds ... No one understands the volatile mix of politics, public life and religion better than Tom Brady.' Tom Robisheaux, Duke University 'This is a quite extraordinary manuscript; one of those few books which can truly be termed a masterpiece. Tom Brady is the foremost senior scholar of the Reformation, and he has devoted his career to reshaping the way German Reformation history is understood, by bringing social and political history to bear on a terrain that used to be primarily that of ecclesiastical history. This book is the summation of his life's work. No other scholar could command a similar range and depth of scholarship, and combine it with a completely original, mature vision of the entire period 1400 to 1650.' Lyndal Roper, Balliol College, Oxford University 'Brady's writing is gripping, his scholarship deeply erudite, and his arguments are strongly and persuasively presented ...There is no one better to have filled this need than Brady.' H-German '... like no other history of the Holy Roman Empire ... this book is interdisciplinary in the most judicious and fruitful ways. It is filled with riveting stories. Brady's analyses are often profound, yet his text includes basic information for the nonspecialist.' Susan C. Karant-Nunn, American Historical Review


'This extraordinary book provides the reader with the best account of late medieval and early modern German history available in any language ... This is a post-confessional history in which religion retains its centrality but not its polemical edge, a modern history that has been released from the shackles of modernization, and a history in which ordinary villagers and townsmen take their places in a story that was most often dictated by princes and nobles. And it is a story with a powerful narrative arc. What an achievement.' H. C. Erik Midelfort, University of Virginia 'A commanding and brilliant view of the Reformation era. This masterful book is the new starting point for anyone seeking a fresh and up-to-date understanding of the Germanies, the reformations in religion, and the religious confessions linking the early modern and modern worlds ... No one understands the volatile mix of politics, public life and religion better than Tom Brady.' Tom Robisheaux, Duke University 'This is a quite extraordinary manuscript; one of those few books which can truly be termed a masterpiece. Tom Brady is the foremost senior scholar of the Reformation, and he has devoted his career to reshaping the way German Reformation history is understood, by bringing social and political history to bear on a terrain that used to be primarily that of ecclesiastical history. This book is the summation of his life's work. No other scholar could command a similar range and depth of scholarship, and combine it with a completely original, mature vision of the entire period 1400 to 1650.' Lyndal Roper, Balliol College, Oxford University 'Brady's writing is gripping, his scholarship deeply erudite, and his arguments are strongly and persuasively presented ...There is no one better to have filled this need than Brady.' H-German '... like no other history of the Holy Roman Empire ... this book is interdisciplinary in the most judicious and fruitful ways. It is filled with riveting stories. Brady's analyses are often profound, yet his text includes basic information for the nonspecialist.' Susan C. Karant-Nunn, American Historical Review This extraordinary book provides the reader with the best account of late medieval and early modern German history available in any language. Covering 250 years, Brady has transcended the tired controversies about whether the Lutheran Reformation was good for the German nation or for `us,' about whether the emerging territorial states within the empire subverted the supposedly common purpose of a more unified German state, and about whether these two processes contributed to the emergence of an illiberal Germany that differed fatefully from a more liberal West. In these ways Brady's study overcomes the surprisingly tenacious Rankean model for the history of `Germany in the age of the Reformation'; and by insisting that the Germanies experienced Reformations, he contributes to our understanding that one of the permanent legacies of the early modern period has been a Germany that was and is fairly evenly divided between Catholics and Protestants: the only country in Europe for which that is true. Brady's prose is sober, muscular, thoughtful, and occasionally witty, representing decades of careful reflection and a massive erudition. By concentrating on the problems of reforming the Holy Roman Empire and the Church, Brady also analyzes two intertwined and crucial processes that link the fifteenth century to all that came afterwards, and in this respect, too, his book blazes a new trail. This is a post-confessional history in which religion retains its centrality but not its polemical edge, a modern history that has been released from the shackles of modernization, and a history in which ordinary villagers and townsmen take their places in a story that was most often dictated by princes and nobles. And it is a story with a powerful narrative arc. What an achievement. -H. C. Erik Midelfort, University of Virginia A commanding and brilliant view of the Reformation era. This masterful book is the new starting point for anyone seeking a fresh and up-to-date understanding of the Germanies, the reformations in religion, and the religious confessions linking the early modern and modern worlds. Setting aside a host of myths and misconceptions, Brady deftly shows how the reforms of the Holy Roman Empire and the religious reformations formed two phases of a single transformation of the early modern German world. Extending the narrative of the Reformation era back to 1400 and forward to 1648, Brady shows why the Empire mattered so much and how it developed an unusually durable dispersed form of governance while accommodating two rival religious confessions. Along the way he offers sharp insights into the nature of politics, the reformations, the making of religious confessions, war and society. No one understands the volatile mix of politics, public life and religion better than Tom Brady. - Tom Robisheaux, Duke University This is a quite extraordinary manuscript; one of those few books which can truly be termed a masterpiece. Tom Brady is the foremost senior scholar of the Reformation, and he has devoted his career to reshaping the way German Reformation history is understood, by bringing social and political history to bear on a terrain that used to be primarily that of ecclesiastical history. This book is the summation of his life's work. No other scholar could command a similar range and depth of scholarship, and combine it with a completely original, mature vision of the entire period 1400 to 1650. -Lyndal Roper, Balliol College, Oxford University This book is a tour de force by one of the leading historians of early modern Germany. Thomas A. Brady Jr. has written a history of the German lands in a grand narrative style, tracing political, religious, and social developments over two and a half centuries. Brady's writing is gripping, his scholarship deeply erudite, and his arguments are strongly and persuasively presented. -Marc R. Forster, H-German Scholars and students of early modern Germany history have long been without a scholarly, one-volume narrative of the history of the German lands that includes the century before the Protestant Reformations and continues through to the formation of the confessions and the Thirty Years' War. Thomas A Brady, Jr., has given us what we wanted. The dense and carefully written work is a summation of Brady's lifelong reading in German history, and is presented as a synthesis of the best research we have of the political, religious, and social history from 1400 to 1650...[He] has written an excellent book that will endure. Canadian Journal of History, Daniel Christensen, Biola University Audacious in its general assertions while rich in its particulars, Brady's German Histories represents a summa for an extraordinary generation of historians of Germany. -Randolph C. Head, Central European History Thomas A. Brady Jr. has yet again made a marvelous contribution to the study of the Reformations and early modern central Europe. -Ai He Zheng, Words & World Thomas A. Brady's book is a grand oeuvre: a loving, thoughtful, and revisionist evaluation and synthesis of 250 years of German political and religious history. -Robert D. Billinger, Jr., German Studies Review ...like no other history of the Holy Roman Empire...this book is interdisciplinary in the most judicious and fruitful ways. It is filled with riveting stories. Brady's analyses are often profound, yet his text includes basic information for the nonspecialist. - Susan C. Karant-Nunn, American Historical Review This is a remarkably erudite book. Writing with verve and wit, Brady enlivens the text with mordant commentary and telling vignettes. -Jonathan Strom, The Journal of Modern History ...an evaluation of Germany's transition over 250 years to the early modern era which will no doubt preoccupy historians for some time. -Georg Schmidt, European History Quarterly


Author Information

Thomas A. Brady, Jr studied at the universities of Notre Dame, Columbia, and Chicago. He taught for 23 years at the University of Oregon and 18 years at the University of California, Berkeley, where he held the Peder Sather Chair of History, and as a guest at the University of Arizona and the National University of Ireland at Galway. A specialist in central European history from 1400 to 1800, his principal writings include Ruling Class, Regime, and Reformation at Strasbourg 1520–1555; Turning Swiss: Cities and Empire 1450–1550; Protestant Politics: Jacob Sturm (1489–1555) and The German Reformation; The Politics of the German Reformation; and Communities, Politics, and Reformations in Early Modern Europe. In addition to his PhD from the University of Chicago, Professor Brady holds the PhD honoris causa from the University of Bern, Switzerland. He has held Guggenheim, Fulbright, and Humboldt fellowships and appointments in the Historisches Kolleg at Munich and in the National Humanities Center.

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