Here is Part I. (The rest is on Youtube at this link: http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=siege+of+vienna+1529&aq=2&oq=siege+of+vienna+)
CLICK ON ALL IMAGES TO ENLARGE
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
The Siege of Vienna, 1529
Interesting documentary (especially for uniforms, weapons, and re-enactments) from the Military History Channel, in six parts.
List of Popes during the reign of Henry VIII
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Study guide terms for tomorrow's multiple choice test
Make sure to check the Power Point update in the post below.
As for the study guide, anything below the Battle of Mohacs will not be on the test, as we have not discussed these things in class.
We will "tie up" these "loose ends" after the multiple choice section on Monday, then head to the situation in England and Henry VIII.
Power Point from Thursday
Here is the rest of the Power Point.
"Problem #3: The Ottoman Turks" will not be on the test. You do not have to know about the Battle of Mohacs, as we have not yet discussed it in class.
Above:
Burgher Reform•at first urban phenomenon
•why?
•trading cities
–hard-working merchant class (vs. “lazy priests”)
–middle class affected lower class
–financial independence (vs. Church and HRE taxes)
•more Catholic in S. Germany
–investments in property (incl. churches)
–closer to Italy (there were exceptions to this)
–Habsburg family influence
–stronger nobility
•
Spread of Reformation
•Diets allowed for delays in official decision regarding reformers (afraid of defections/civil war in HRE)
•1529: Reforming princes met in Speyer to complain about Charles
•prepared a “protest” (Lutherans -> Reformers -> “Protestants”)
•Bohemia fertile ground; why?
•Hus!
•also Hungary; why?
•Catholic armies losing to Turks; open area for Protestant missionaries

Above: Eastward expansion: Kronstadt, Transylvania (modern-day Brasov, Romania)
German Catholic cathedral became Lutheran
Nothing about the Reformation spreading to Scandinavia will be on this test.
Since this was a large unit, and since Greek Week took up a lot of fourth block, we will have two tests in this unit. Tomorrow's multiple choice will cover mostly Luther and related political and cultural issues. Later, there will be a test on the Peace of Augsburg, Zwingli and Calvin, and the "reformation" in England.
Check back later today for an update regarding the study guide.
Sunday, September 4, 2011
Erasmus from (of?) Rotterdam
Hello. I hope you're all enjoying your weekend. In between college football games yesterday I did a little extra research on Erasmus, which is a subject that has defined Labor Day for the last few years now. Although there are plenty of academic biographies of the man, my favorite remains Stefan Zweig's narrative paean, Erasmus of Rotterdam (1934). Zweig was a Viennese writer from the early twentieth century who was clairvoyant enough to see what was about to happen to his homeland (and people like him within it), and fled to London the year he published this book.
Here is an excerpt (I took photographs of the pages, as I lack a scanner) from the book, and the accompanying Hans Holbein portrait it discusses (click on photos to enlarge if necessary):
And here is a link to an interesting article about an international project involving the translation of Erasmus' works:
http://www.dickinson.edu/story.aspx?id=10737429029
http://www.dickinson.edu/story.aspx?id=10737429029
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