6. His violent opposition to the Peasant's War made his teachings popular among northern German princes. This linkage became ingrained into Protestant German society from the time of Reformation and on. The predominantly Roman Catholic German speaking populations often used their affiliation to the papacy as a justification for political dissidence.
7. Some of the German princes - especially Frederick, Elector of Saxony - were "Protestants" who opposed the Edict of Worms. Frederick "kidnapped" Martin Luther after Luther was released by the Diet of Worms and protected him for the next several years. By this time, a number of German princes and a significant number of the German people had aligned themselves with Luther, and the Holy Roman Emperor was no longer in a strong political position to neutralize Luther.
8. It was a model Christian community for the 16th Century Protestant reformers. It was a society that was ruled by God through civil magistrates and reformed ministers. The whole city was ran by the church, they set up to prove a religion could run a land and acted as their own form of government, this is a theocracy.
9.The Anabaptists were radical because they showed religious toleration, they knew little children could not choose the religion they wanted to follow, so they did not baptize them. They also admitted women into the ministry. They were persecuted because leaders believed church and state would begin separating from one another.
10. The main cause of the English Reformation was the desire of