Women's Responses to the Reformation

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The 500th anniversary of Martin Luther’s 95 Theses is fast approaching. The University of Oxford has begun preparations to mark this key event in European history, some of which are centred on the Taylor Institution’s collection of Lutheran pamphlets. This workshop focuses specifically on how women from all walks of life, and from across Europe and beyond, responded to the events of the Reformation. In particular, we are interested in exploring women’s cultural and written responses. We are delighted that Professor Ulrike Strasser (UC San Diego) will speak on gender and the Jesuit missions in the Marianas Islands as part of the workshop.

Recent Episodes
  • Political wisdom and deep devotion: The introduction of the Reformation in Southern Lower Saxony by Elisabeth of Brandenburg, Duchess of Calenberg-Gottingen
    Jun 28, 2016 – 31:20
  • 'Print therefore good Lord, and write these examples in my memory': The Forgotten History of Writing and Printing Lady Abergavenny's Prayers
    Jun 28, 2016 – 19:35
  • Danish Noblewomen's Use of Manuscript Prayer Books c. 1550-1600
    Jun 28, 2016 – 15:35
  • Textual Negotiation and Resistance of Female Religious Communities Facing Reformation
    Jun 28, 2016 – 17:40
  • Sin and Salvation: Churching as a disciplinary tool in Early Modern Denmark
    Jun 28, 2016 – 20:51
  • Brandenburg's Calvinist Turn and the Portrayal of Dynastic Women
    Jun 28, 2016 – 40:04
  • Recording women's responses to the Reformation: Henry Jessey as "relator" of Sarah Wight's religious prophecy in The Exceeding Riches of Grace (1647)
    Jun 28, 2016 – 19:00
  • The women behind the prophecies: A discussion of Ursula Jost and her printer Margarethe Prüss
    Jun 28, 2016 – 25:25
  • Of Martyrs and Makhanas: Jesuits and Gender in the Seventeenth-Century Marianas Mission
    Jun 27, 2016 – 28:22
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