Title | The story of Nuremberg |
Creator (LCNAF) |
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Contributor (Local) |
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Publisher | J. M. Dent & Co. |
Date | 1899 |
Subject.Topical (LCSH) |
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Subject.Geographic (TGN) |
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Genre (AAT) |
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Language | English |
Type (DCMI) |
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Original Item Extent | 303 pages; 18 cm |
Original Item Location | DD901.N93 H4 1899 |
Original Item URL | http://library.uh.edu/record=b1684865~S11 |
Digital Collection | Exotic Impressions: Views of Foreign Lands |
Digital Collection URL | http://digital.lib.uh.edu/collection/exotic |
Repository | Kenneth Franzheim II Rare Books Room, William R. Jenkins Architecture and Art Library, University of Houston Libraries |
Repository URL | http://info.lib.uh.edu/about/campus-libraries-collections/william-r-jenkins-architecture-art-library |
Use and Reproduction | No Copyright - United States |
Identifier | exotic_201304_001 |
Title | Page 75 |
Format (IMT) |
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File Name | exotic_201304_001_085.jpg |
Transcript | Nuremberg and the Reformat i None the less the Cardinal received at Nuremberg a great welcome next year, and Luther's followers continued at present to perform the rites and cling to the old forms of the Church. Reform, not revolution, was what they still hoped for. But the stream of events carried them rapidly with i:. Willibald Pirk- heimer, thanks to a satire against Eck, the bitter opponent of Luther, was included in 1519 in the Papal Bull, by which Luther was excommunicated. The Council, annoyed by the excommunication of Pirk- heimer and Lazarus Spengler (Clerk of the Council), refused to interfere with the printing and publishing of Luther's works, and gradually passed over to his side. To show how little they respected this decree of excommunication, they actually sent Spengler to represent the town at the Diet of Worms. For Charles V. held his first Reichstag (1521) at Worms, and not at Nuremberg, because of an outbreak te there. (Outbreaks of plague were not uncommon at Nuremberg, nor were they surprising. \ all refuse was always thrown into the Pegnitz on the understanding that " the river would eat up all the dirt.") I- v. thil Did oi Worms that Luther made his Confession of Faith, and fought single-handed against Pope and Emperor the great battle for the right of freedom of conscience. When, as the result, the ban of the Empire had been passed upon him and all his works, and the report was abroad that violent hands had been laid on him, Albert who had followed him from the first, wrote in his diary, exp the same time the opinion of the nation; 44 Whether he lives or whether he has been murdered, I know not ; but he has tor the Christian faith and has been punished bv the ur rhat, too, eras the opinion of all the more inijxv men in Nuremberg. Cautious in expressing then feel- |