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website/src/content/blog/2026/02/16/short_reformation_stories.md
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website/src/content/blog/2026/02/16/short_reformation_stories.md
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---
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title: 10 very short stories about the Reformation
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description:
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pubDate: 2026-02-16
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---
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I'm summarising a few of the big stories about the Reformation I've been
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studying recently.
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1. Moral corruption in public office
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Since the major reforms of Pope Gregory VII (r. 1073-1085) and his successors,
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the Roman Church had gone through several cycles of moral panic, attempting to
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crack down on the 'abuses' of the clergy. The main abuses that got folk worked
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up were simony (i.e. bribery), nepotism, holding multiple benefices, keeping
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mistresses and having illegitimate children with them, and getting entangled in
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secular power politics. The Reformation occurred just at a particularly severe
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instance of one of these moral panics. Both Protestants and Catholics responded
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with unprecedented reforms, in many ways similar: the clergy was transformed
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from a comfortable club for elites into a smaller band of well-educated and
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committed professionals. In the new Latin church, increasingly, nobility was
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neither necessary nor sufficient, but education and moral virtue were. Amongst
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Catholics, the priest became the spiritual equivalent of a Personal Trainer.
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They became experts at hearing confessions and guiding the highly personal
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development of their flock. Amongst Protestants, priests and ministers focused
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much more on shared community life, leading communal Psalm-singing and teaching
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their congregations with sermons. Amongst both Catholics and Protestants, clergy
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were expected to be resident in their parish or diocese, preach the Gospel,
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catechise, and administer sacraments.
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2. The Eucharist
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In the 14th and 15th centuries, people in Latin Christendom became increasingly
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devoted to celebrating the Eucharist. However, ordinary people became
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increasingly estranged from it. The Eucharist was only distributed to the laity
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under one kind, and then perhaps as infrequently as once a year at Easter, the
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legal minimum. The liturgy became a spectacle, but not something ordinary people
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could participate in or even understand. This had led to major protests,
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including the Hussite and Lollard revolts, in the fifteenth century. These
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revolts had been repressed by the Church. However, in the sixteenth century, the
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Church failed to hold back the tide. Protestants reformed the liturgy, turning
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the priest to face the congregation, translating the liturgy into the
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vernacular, and distributing the elements in both kinds. Catholics, while not
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abolishing the Mass altogether as the Protestants did, mandated frequent
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attendance at Mass and encouraged priests to explain to the laity what was
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happening in their own language as the liturgy went on. Christians in the Latin
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tradition now receive communion in a variety of ways, much of that diversity
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explicable in sixteenth-century terms, but almost all receive communion
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frequently, receive both species, and can interpret what they are doing
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theologically: these are all Reformation legacies. The fractious politics of the
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sixteenth century meant that these different developments of the Eucharist
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hardened into explicitly irreconcilable doctrines. Christians in the Latin
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tradition still do not all offer one another communion as a result of this
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ongoing schism.
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3. Monastic reform
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In the fifteenth century, there was a well-established monastic system in Latin
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Christendom. It functioned as a legitimate alternative career to marriage for
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elite men and women. They had a useful social role: they were paid by other
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elites to pray for the souls of themselves and their loved ones, thereby, they
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believed, reducing the duration of their stay in Purgatory. However, in the
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sixteenth century, this system broke down. Theologians challenged the doctrine
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of Purgatory, undermining the usefulness of the system. The growing
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middle-classes resented a system which entrenched the power of the aristocracy.
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The poor resented the accumulation of wealth in many monasteries, which
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typically required exorbitant entry fees, or were limited to people of noble
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birth, or both. In many places, monasteries were overhauled, ending the practice
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of praying for the souls of benefactors and opening up membership to those of
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humbler origins, and going out into the world to preach the Gospel and do works
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of charity. In many other places, the monastic system was abolished altogether.
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4. Justification
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How can I be right with God? In the medieval Roman Church, there were several
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doctrinal positions available, and none was authorised as the official 'correct'
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answer. One thing everyone agreed on, even revolutionaries like Jan Hus, was
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that you had to _do something_ to be right with God. Being justified was a
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matter of God working in you to transform you from something wretched to
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something holy. So, if there was no holiness, there was no justification.
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Profoundly unsatisfied with this, Martin Luther presented a radical alternative:
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justification is a free, gracious gift of God, won by Christ's work, not ours.
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Becoming holy isn't completely irrelevant, but for Luther, becoming holy, or
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'sanctification', comes second, and is not the condition of justification. This
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idea drove a wedge through the Church. Is this doctrine simply presenting the
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gospel truth of freedom in Christ, or is it an excuse for being lax on sin?
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5. The authority of Scripture versus tradition
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In the sixteenth century, various schismatics who we now know broadly as
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Protestants intoned with one voice, that venerating saints is idol-worship.
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Christians have venerated saints since at least the 3rd century, if not before,
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and is a tradition affirmed across the Christian world, in Rome, Constantinople,
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Alexandria and Antioch. How could the Protestants come up with such a novel
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idea? Their answer: they got it from Scripture. They argued that Scripture
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consistently condemns worshipping anything other than God, and nowhere promotes
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exceptions for a special kind of worship for a special kind of non-God. When it
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was pointed out to them that the cult of saints was an ancient and universal
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Christian practice, and affirmed by councils and the Pope, they answered that
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Scripture is a superior authority to the Church.
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6. Confessionalisation
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In the sixteenth century, there was a sudden profusion of confessions and
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catechisms. While Christians have used confessions, or creeds, since ancient
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times to rule on their disputes, the Reformation confessions took on different
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functions. For the Lutherans, the confessions sought to unify the Lutheran
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churches in distinction to the Catholic, making no attempt to reconcile their
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differences, but in contrast, to spell out and emphasise those differences. For
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the Reformed churches, that went even further, with each national church
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producing their own confessions in distinction with each other. The Reformed
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confessions didn't even function to unite the Reformed churches internationally:
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they had a local, and perhaps even temporal, character. Confessions became
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longer and ever more precise as time went on, becoming 'lawyer-like' in contrast
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to the sparse, poetic quality of the ancient creeds. The Catholics were by all
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means at it too, spelling out exactly what distinguished them from the
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Protestants in the Tridentine Profession of Faith and in numerous catechisms.
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All this was doubtless only possible because of the recent introduction of the
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printing press to Europe from China. For the first time, Christians were using
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confessional texts at scale not to unite Christians but to divide them.
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7. Kings and clerics
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Pope Gregory VII was famous for fighting the Holy Roman Emperor for the right to
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decide who gets to invest priests. This issue and others continued to grind at
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the relationship between the Pope and Europe's princes. From the 12th century,
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popes claimed to have ultimate authority on both spiritual and temporal matters,
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and attempted to exercise this alleged authority with mixed success. Kings
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fought back. The kings of France and Spain did particularly well at exacting
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papal concessions, and by the sixteenth century ended up pretty much in charge
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of Catholicism in their respective realms. In Germany, Switzerland, Scandinavia,
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England and Scotland, monarchs were more under the papal thumb, sometimes much
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more. Ulrich Zwingli, the great Swiss reformer, complained that the Swiss had to
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accept whatever Roman carriage-driver the Pope decided to send as their priest
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or bishop. In 1538, Henry VIII declared himself the Supreme Head of the Church
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of England. This move was little distinguished from the actions of his French
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and Spanish counterparts (apart from its brazenness). But in the context of the
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time, he was compelled to make entreaties with the German Protestants. After a
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period of ambiguity, under his grand-daughter Elizabeth, England ended up firmly
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in the Protestant camp.
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8. Mysticism
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In the late Middle Ages, a movement known as _devotio moderna_ or 'the modern
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devotion' swept Europe. It challenged the old rituals of public, communal, vocal
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prayer, and emphasised private meditation and mental prayer. For adherents, the
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goal was to transform your soul and re-orient it towards God. Along the way,
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you'd be likely to use methods from books written by Christendom's top gurus,
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but there was doubtless plenty of unregulated mysticism happening, too. In the
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Reformation, mystical experiences became ambiguous on both sides of the fence,
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for different reasons. Protestants emphasised shared over private spirituality,
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and suspected mystics of practicing needless and idolatrous false religion. But
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Protestants also emphasised the work of the Spirit in each believer by faith,
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and often continued practicing private spirituality. Meanwhile, Catholics
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celebrated private spirituality and were perfectly happy emphasising that it
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took hard work to approach a direct encounter with God's presence, but were
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unsettled by the thought that if you could have a such an encounter by praying
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and meditating, you wouldn't need the mediation of the Church to bring you God's
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presence through the sacraments.
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9. Conciliarism
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The medieval Latin church had a thing for councils. Councils functioned as a way
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to solve disagreements in a fair way, thus generating robust consensus: in
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theory, at least. Idealists, called 'conciliarists,' wanted to prioritise
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councils over every other authority, even the Pope: though that meant that
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ecumenical councils were deeply distrusted by exactly the one person who had the
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sole authority to call them. These conflicts still lay unresolved when Martin
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Luther led a revolt against Rome in 1517. For some decades, leaders on both
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sides of the divide held out hope that an ecumenical council might heal the
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schism. However, power politics got in the way, and by the end of the Council of
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Trent, it was abundantly clear that councils had become solidly subservient to
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papal authority, and were only ever going to exacerbate the split. Conciliarism
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was finally dead.
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10. Persecution
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In 1520, Martin Luther was declared an heretic in a papal bull issued by Pope
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Leo X. In response, Martin Luther burned the bull in public and announced that
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Leo X was the Antichrist. Various players in various quarters tried various
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strategies for resolving the schism, and it seems that few were willing to give
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up on violent coercion. In both Catholic and Protestant domains, magistrates
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burned books and burned people in an attempt to quell heresy.
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