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18 Σεπ 2024 · Peace of Augsburg, first permanent legal basis for the coexistence of Lutheranism and Catholicism in Germany, promulgated on September 25, 1555, by the Diet of the Holy Roman Empire assembled earlier that year at Augsburg.
- Religious war and the Peace of Augsburg - Encyclopedia Britannica
The resulting “Princes’ War” was brief (1552–53) and...
- Religious war and the Peace of Augsburg - Encyclopedia Britannica
The Peace of Augsburg (German: Augsburger Frieden), also called the Augsburg Settlement, [1] was a treaty between Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, and the Schmalkaldic League, signed on 25 September 1555 in the German city of Augsburg.
The Religious Peace of Augsburg (September 25, 1555) The Diet of Augsburg (1555) is widely viewed as the turning point between the tumultuous age of the Protestant Reformation in the German lands and the subsequent era of confessional formation and negotiation. In the wake of two wars – the Schmalkaldic War of 1546-47 and the
2 Δεκ 2022 · Lutherans presented the Confession of Augsburg in an attempt to prove to Rome that their views were Biblical. This confession remains the basis of the Lutheran faith. However, reconciliation proved impossible, and Charles ordered Lutherans to reunite with the Catholic church by April 15, 1531.
23 Νοε 2016 · The Augsburg Confession—a written Protestant creed of the city—resulted from the 1530 diet, and Charles V’s abdication of the Imperial throne in 1555 led to the Peace of Augsburg, which let each prince in Germany determine the state religion in their own territory (endnote 1).
AUGSBURG, RELIGIOUS PEACE OF (1555). Enacted by the imperial diet (the general assembly of the Estates of the Holy Roman Empire) at Augsburg in 1555, the Religious Peace was the most significant law created in the Holy Roman Empire between the Golden Bull of 1356 and the Peace of Westphalia of 1648. These three laws formed the empire's ...
25 Οκτ 2024 · The resulting “Princes’ War” was brief (1552–53) and inconclusive, and in 1555 a peace was signed at an imperial diet held, again, in Augsburg. The Peace of Augsburg closed one epoch of German history and opened another.