Humanities › History & Culture German Peasants War (1524 – 1525): Uprising of the Poor Agrarian and Urban Poor Waged Class Warfare Against Their Rulers Share Flipboard Email Print Thomas Muntzer, pastor and rebel leader during the German Peasants War of 1524 - 1525. 1488 - 27 May 1525. Culture Club / Getty Images History & Culture European History European Revolutions European History Figures & Events Wars & Battles The Holocaust Industry and Agriculture History in Europe American History African American History African History Ancient History and Culture Asian History Genealogy Inventions Latin American History Medieval & Renaissance History Military History The 20th Century Women's History View More By Jone Johnson Lewis Jone Johnson Lewis Women's History Writer B.A., Mundelein College M.Div., Meadville/Lombard Theological School Jone Johnson Lewis is a women's history writer who has been involved with the women's movement since the late 1960s. She is a former faculty member of the Humanist Institute. Learn about our Editorial Process Updated on February 11, 2019 The German Peasants War was the rebellion of agrarian peasants in the southern and central parts of German-speaking central Europe against the rulers of their cities and provinces. Urban poor joined in the rebellion as it spread to cities. Context In Europe in the mid-16th century, German-speaking parts of central Europe were loosely organized under the Holy Roman Empire (which, as has often been said, was not holy, Roman, nor really an empire). Aristocrats ruled small city-states or provinces, subject to loose control by Charles V of Spain, then the Holy Roman Emperor, and by the Roman Catholic Church, which taxed the local princes. The feudal system was ending, where there was an assumed mutual trust and mirrored obligations and responsibilities between peasants and the princes, as princes sought to increase their power over the peasants and to consolidate ownership of land. The institution of Roman law rather than medieval feudal law meant that the peasants lost some of their standing and power. Reformation preaching, changing economic conditions, and a history of revolts against authority also likely played a part in the rebellion’s initiation. The rebels were not rising against the Holy Roman Empire, which had little to do with their lives in any case, but against the Roman Catholic Church and more local nobles, princes, and rulers. The Revolt The first revolt as at Stühlingen, and then it spread. As the rebellion began and spread, the rebels rarely attacked violently except to capture supplies and cannons. Large scale battles began after April, 1525. The princes had hired mercenaries and built up their armies, and then turned to crush the peasants, who were untrained and poorly armed in comparison. Twelve Articles of Memmingen A list of demands of the peasants was in circulation by 1525. Some related to the church: more power of congregation members to select their own pastors, changes in tithing. Other demands were secular: stopping land enclosure which cut off access to fish and game and other products of the woods and rivers, ending serfdom, reform in the justice system. Frankenhausen The peasants were crushed in a battle at Frankenhausen, fought May 15, 1525. More than 5,000 peasants were killed, and the leaders captured and executed. Key Figures Martin Luther, whose ideas inspired some of the princes in German-speaking Europe to break with the Roman Catholic Church, opposed the peasant rebellion. He preached peaceful action by the peasants in his An Exhortation of Peace in Response to the Twelve Articles of the Swabian Peasants. He taught that peasants had a responsibility to farm the land and rulers had the responsibility to keep the peace. Just at the end as the peasants were losing, Luther published his Against the Murderous, Thieving Hordes of Peasants. In this, he encouraged a violent and quick reaction on the part of the ruling classes. After the war was over and the peasants defeated, he then criticized the violence by the rulers and the continued suppression of peasants. Thomas Müntzer or Münzer, another Reformation minister in Germany, supported the peasants, by the early part of 1525 had definitely joined the rebels, and may have consulted with some of their leaders to shape their demands. His vision of a church and the world used images of a small “elect” battling a greater evil to bring good into the world. After the end of the revolt, Luther and other Reformers held up Müntzer as an example of taking the Reformation too far. Among the leaders who defeated Müntzer’s forces at Frankenhausen were Philip of Hesse, John of Saxony, and Henry and George of Saxony. Resolution As many as 300,000 people took part in the rebellion, and some 100,000 were killed. The peasants won almost none of their demands. The rulers, interpreting the war as a reason for repression, instituted laws that were more repressive than before, and often decided to repress more unconventional forms of religious change, too, thus slowing the progress of the Protestant Reformation. Cite this Article Format mla apa chicago Your Citation Lewis, Jone Johnson. "German Peasants War (1524 – 1525): Uprising of the Poor." ThoughtCo, Aug. 27, 2020, thoughtco.com/german-peasants-war-4150166. Lewis, Jone Johnson. (2020, August 27). German Peasants War (1524 – 1525): Uprising of the Poor. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/german-peasants-war-4150166 Lewis, Jone Johnson. "German Peasants War (1524 – 1525): Uprising of the Poor." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/german-peasants-war-4150166 (accessed June 10, 2023). copy citation