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The German Peasants' War was the greatest popular uprising in Western Europe before the FrenchRevolution. Like a vast contagion it spread from southwest Germany through Württemberg, Swabia, theAllgäu, Franconia, Thuringia, Saxony to Alsace in what is now France, Austria, and Switzerland. It moved alongthe valleys from one region to another, and it broke out unexpectedly in areas far away. Everywhere, thepeasants were 'up', massing in armed bands.
Authority and rulership collapsed, the familiar structures of theHoly Roman Empire were overturned, and the fragility of the existing social and religious hierarchies wasexposed. People even began to dream of a new order. It did not last. In spring 1525, the 'Aufruhr' or the 'turbulence' as contemporaries called it, had reached itsheight, rolling all before it. But by May the tide had turned. Somewhere between seventy and a hundredthousand peasants were slain by the forces of the lords as they put down the revolt.
That summer of blood, maybe one per cent of the population of the region of the war were killed, an enormous loss of life in justover two months. Summer of Fire and Blood follows a cataclysmic event that involved vast numbers of people moving inturbulent flows as they sought to change their world. The vision that drove them was about peoples'relationship to creation, and that is why it still matters now.
Going back to the moment before the structuresof our own world were set up can help us to see new answers to the questions that confront us today. Thepeasants' story matters too because discloses a radical Reformation, with a theological, social and politicalvision that could have gone in a different direction. This is the Reformation we have lost sight of, and this iswhy we need to understand what drove the peasants.
For what mattered to them also matters to us.