[The Age of the Reformation by Preserved Smith]@TWC D-Link book
The Age of the Reformation

CHAPTER I
82/1552

Those of 1479 appealed against the Mendicant Orders and against the appointment of foreigners.

They clamored for a new council and for reform on the basis of the decrees of Basle; they protested against judicial appeals to Rome, against the annates and against the crusade tax.

It was stated that the papal appointees were rather fitted to be drivers of mules than pastors of souls.

Such words found a reverberating echo among the people.

The powerful pen of Gregory of Heimburg, sometimes called "the lay Luther," roused his countrymen to a patriotic stand against the Italian usurpation.
The Diet of 1502 resolved not to let money raised by indulgences leave Germany, but to use it against the Turks.


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