WHO/WHAT AM I

I have another German historical figure for you that made a big noise with another achievement, this one that the church today would condemn.
Again no idea who that might have been? "Would condemn" - does that mean the achievement is no longer practised or doesn't exist?
What century was that?
 
What made you do so?
What choose to read the Martin Luther bio? I was going to have him as my character, but like to told you it'd be too easy for a German. This new one is not easy either, but I found it fascinating to research .
 
Again no idea who that might have been? "Would condemn" - does that mean the achievement is no longer practised or doesn't exist?
What century was that?
Yes, no longer practised.
He lived in the 15th Cent. His achievement was rather late in his life and its outcome heavily involved the Church.
 
I would never had got Karlstadt but looked him up and was fascinated by his story. A contemporary of Luther and often at odds with him. I liked the way Luther put the screws on him when he hid with him during the Peasant revolution. It was Theology up for grabs. Blinking Iconoclasts smashing statues was like a scene out of Monty Python's life of Brian. "We're the peoples western iconoclastic front of Hamburg!"

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Like something Trump would ask his 'redneck' followers to do.
 
made a big noise with another achievement, this one that the church today would condemn
I'll take a shot at Thomas Müntzer, he seems pretty colourful and would probably have taken a shot at us.
Progress Film, a DDR company made a biography of him in 1956, apparently turning him into a proto-Marxist hero! Thomas I'm wondering if Richie wonders if you had seen it🤓
 
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I'll take a shot at Thomas Müntzer
Nope. Thomas guessed him in the last one. My new character wrote something that rocked medieval Europe to its core and the church was at the centre of it.
 
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Yes, no longer practised.
He lived in the 15th Cent. His achievement was rather late in his life and its outcome heavily involved the Church.
Who benefitted from this achievement? The church was involved. you say. What was the church's official position on it?
 
I'll take a shot at Thomas Müntzer, he seems pretty colourful and would probably have taken a shot at us.
Progress Film, a DDR company made a biography of him in 1956, apparently turning him into a proto-Marxist hero! Thomas I'm wondering if Richie wonders if you had seen it🤓
Quite.
It's amazing, Vince, what detailed knowledge you have about the GDR/DDR. Where from? I didn't know that there was that 1956 film about Müntzer and I have never seen it. However, I did watch the trailer available on YouTube and, as suspected, it made me inwardly shudder. What an awful diction and music reminding me of the old NS newsreel Wochenschau. I may have seen a 1970 two-part TV production, though, but I'm not sure really. I had an aversion to those kinds of propaganda films aiming to fabricate a socialist line of tradition by exploiting historical characters. Müntzer, in contrast to Luther, was a textbook example since he was willing to use violence which, apart from the property question, was the fundamental divide between communists and socialists/social democrats.
 
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Yes, no longer practised.
He lived in the 15th Cent. His achievement was rather late in his life and its outcome heavily involved the Church.
Could it be Copernicus although he also lived in the 16th Cent. and his nationality is not free of doubt?
 
Could it be Copernicus although he also lived in the 16th Cent. and his nationality is not free of doubt?
Mine is definitely German born. Joined a branch of the Catholic church at a young age. It is what he did later in life that defined him when he offered something to the C Church that was to have a devastating outcome across medieval Europe.
 
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Mine is definitely German born. Joined a branch of the Catholic church at a young age. It is what he did later in life that defined him when he offered something to the C Church that was to have a devastating outcome across medieval Europe.
You don't mean Heinrich Kramer by any chance?
 
You don't mean Heinrich Kramer by any chance?
BINGO. The German Inquisitor who wrote

Malleus Maleficarum, a 300 page treatise on how to identify witches, torture them to elicit a confession, then burn them alive.

 
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