Protestants: The Radicals Who Made the Modern World
By (Author) Alec Ryrie
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
13th April 2018
22nd March 2018
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
History: specific events and topics
280/.409
Paperback
528
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 34mm
390g
Protestant Christianity began with one stubborn monk in 1517. Now it covers the globe and includes almost a billion people. On the 500th anniversary of Luthers theses, a global history of the revolutionary faith that shaped the modern world.
Five hundred years ago Protestant Christianity began with one stubborn monk today, it includes a billion people across the globe.
The upheaval Martin Luther triggered inspired one of the most creative and destructive movements in human history. Protestants is the story of the men and women who made and remade this quarrelsome faith by demanding alarming new freedoms and experimenting in new systems of government. Inspired by their newly accessible Bibles, they transformed their inner lives, a transformation that spilled over into social upheavals and political revolutions. Alec Ryries dazzling history explores how its restless energy made and is still making the modern world.
A book about Protestants could so easily mirror crude stereotypes. Protestants are supposedly staid, prudish, law-abiding and dull. Ryrie instead exposes their infinite variety the weird, wicked and wonderful. This is a fun book about people obsessed with sin Books of the Year, The Times
A treat. Its scholarship showcases one of the leading historians of Protestantism writing today, but the delight of it is the crisp prose, the quiet, cool wit, the wise judgements and the sheer scope from the gates of Wittenberg to the streets of Seoul. Ryrie has a gift for showing how the history of religion is the history of people, in all their glorious, baffling, frightening and endearing variety Diarmaid MacCulloch, author of Reformation and Christianity
This is a book of breathtaking range and penetrating insight. It will shape our perception of the Reformation and its long shadow for years to come Andrew Pettegree, author of Brand Luther
Spectacularly good. Ryrie guides us sure-footedly along the broad paths of Protestant history without neglecting its many fascinating by-ways. He writes with empathy but without illusions; his trademark combination of wit and erudition makes the journey as enjoyable as it is enlightening Prof. Peter Marshall, University of Warwick
A learned, lively look at the various faiths lumped together as Protestant, from Martin Luther in the 16th century to today Rarely has an author of such deep faith offered such a tolerant, engaging history of any religion Kirkus
Ryrie's agile mind, pithy style and energetic narrative bring 500 years of Protestant history to life and into the present global era. Profound and capacious, Protestants is scintillating, shrewd, incisive and proceeds at an astonishing pace. If you wish to buy one book to understand the impact Martin Luther has had on the modern world, this is it The Rt Revd Dr Graham Kings, Mission Theologian in the Anglican Communion
Alec Ryrie was born in London. He studied History and Theology at the Universities of Cambridge and Oxford and is now Professor of the History of Christianity at Durham University. A specialist on the Reformation, he is the author of The Sorcerer's Tale: Faith and Fraud in Tudor England', the prize-winning Being Protestant in Reformation Britain', and is the co-editor of the Journal of Ecclesiastical History.