Summer of Fire and Blood: The German Peasants’ War
Lyndal Roper
Wednesday, 2 April 2025
10:00am
1 hour
Pusey House: Chapel
£8 - £15
Award-winning historian Professor Lyndal Roper tells the story of the German peasants’ War, the greatest popular uprising in western Europe before the French Revolution.
Roper explains how more than 100,000 people gathered in armed bands in 1524 and 1525 to demand a new and more egalitarian order. They took control of vast areas of southern and middle Germany and burned down monasteries, convents and castles. However, the Lords put down the revolt, slaughtering between 70,000 and 100,000 peasants in two months. Roper says the revolt had huge ramifications and was a mass movement that sought to make good on the potential of the Protestant Reformation.
Roper is Regius Chair in History at the University of Oxford and winner of the international Gerda Henkel Prize for outstanding research in the historical humanities. Her previous books include Witch Craze: Terror and Fantasy in Baroque Germany and Martin Luther: Renegade and Prophet.