These men attacked the Church through sermons and writings calling for change.
Who are Jan Hus and John Wycliffe?
100
This person set up a pulpit outside of Wittenberg, Germany where he sold indulgences.
Who is Johann Tetzel?
100
This person outlawed Martin Luther, making it illegal to provide him with food or shelter.
Who is Charles V?
100
"A chicken in every pot"
Who is Henry IV?
100
"I am the state"
Who is Louis XIV?
200
Peasants throughout Germany took to this person's teachings to gain support for social and economic change.
Who is Martin Luther?
200
Protestants of Geneva, Switzerland asked this person to lead their community.
Who is John Calvin?
200
This person wrote to the Pope denouncing Martin Luther's teachings in the Defender of the Faith."
Who is Henry VIII?
200
Granted the purchaser forgiveness of their sins and a spot in heaven
What is an indulgence?
200
This spread Martin Luther's ideas throughout Germany and Scandinavia.
What is the printing press?
300
An agreement between Charles V and the Lutheran princes, allowing each prince to decide which religion would be followed in his lands.
What is the Peace of Augsburg?
300
The idea that God had long ago decided who would gain salvation.
What is predestination?
300
Gave the monarch complete control of the Anglican Church.
What is the Act of Supremacy?
300
A compromise between Protestant and CAtholic practices that made the monarch "supreme governor" over spiritual matters in England.
What is the Elizabethan Settlement?
300
Led by Pope Paul III, set out to revive the moral authority of the Catholic Church and roll back the Protestant tide.
What is the Catholic/Counter Reformation?
400
The religious order that set out on a crusade to spread and defend Catholicism throughout the world.
Who were the Jesuits?
400
When Charles V divided his empire he gave this person Spain, some southern Italian states, the Netherlands, and the colonies of New Spain.
Who is Phillip II?
400
In 1572 Huguenot and Catholic nobles gathered at a wedding, a plot by Catholic royals led to the massacre of 3,000 Huguenots.
What is the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre?
400
Granted Huguenots religious toleration and other freedoms in France.
What is the Edict of Nantes?
400
Protestants who sought to purify the Anglican Church of Catholic practices called for simpler church services, amd a more democratic church with out bishops.
Who were the Puritans?
500
Royal officials who collected taxes, recruited soldiers, and carried out Louis XIV's policies in the French Provinces.
Who were intendants?
500
Prohibited the king from raising taxes with out Parliament's consent and from jailing anyone with out legal justification.
What is the Petition of Right?
500
Believed that poor men should have equal say in government and women should be able to petition parliament.
Who were the Levellers?
500
The Romanavs were the ruling house of this nation.
What is Russia?
500
The Thirty Years' War left two powerful German-speaking powers in Europe.