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Katharina Luther: Nun, Rebel, Wife

Katharina Luther: Nun, Rebel, Wife

Author(s): Anne Boileau

Location(s): Lutherstadt Wittenberg, Saxony Anhalt

Genre(s): Fiction, Historical

Era(s): 16th Century

Location

Content

On 31st October 1517 Martin Luther pinned ninety-five theses on the Castle Church door, Wittenberg, criticizing the Church of Rome; they were printed and published by Lucas Cranach and caused a storm. Nine young nuns, intoxicated by Luther’s subversive writings, became restless and longed to leave their convent. On Good Friday 1523 a haulier smuggled them out hidden in empty herring barrels. Five of them settled in Wittenberg, the very eye of the storm, and one of them – Katharina von Bora – scandalised the world by marrying the revolutionary former monk. Following a near miscarriage, she is confined to her bed to await the birth of their first child; during this time, she sets down her own story. Against a backdrop of 16th Century Europe this vivid account of Katharina von Bora’s early life brings to the spotlight this spirited and courageous woman.

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Book Reviews

Lead Review

Author: tripfiction

It is interesting how a story set in the early part of the 16th Century can have echoes in Western politics of the 21st Century. There are many parallels to be drawn between the...

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