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  1. Hans and Margarethe Luder. As typical parents, Hans and Margarethe Luder were critical players in forming the reformer, their son Martin. Their high expectations and strict punishments for even the smallest offense helped teach the formative lesson: that all transgressions must be atoned for.

  2. Hans and Margarethe Luder were typical parents of their time. A harsh and unforgiving world had made them strict and pragmatic parents of their children and especially of their son, Martin. Wanting the best for their own family, Hans and Margarethe sacrificed much to provide the best opportunities for young Martin to get ahead.

  3. Forming a Reformer. The Parents of Martin Luther. Hans Luder (Luther) was the son of a peasant farmer. Due to inheritance laws, he was not eligible to come into the land of his father. He left his home village in Möhra to work in Eisleben, where Margarethe gave birth to a son.

  4. Son of Hans (1459–1530) and Margarethe Luder, née Lindemann (1459–1531), Martin Luther was born on November 10, 1483, in the Central German city of Eisleben. Luther attended the Latin school in the neighboring city of Mansfeld, before moving to Magdeburg where he attended the cathedral

  5. This time, we will get acquainted with some very important people in Luther’s life: his parents, Hans and Margarethe Luder. Both Hans and Margarethe were born around 1450 in Germany, a part of the Holy Roman Empire. They were married in 1479.

  6. The Reformer as Son – Luther and his Mother (May 20, 1531) Margarethe Luther (née Lindemann, 1460-1531) came from a middle-class family in Eisenach. She married Hans Luder, a miner and copper smelter, and moved with him to Eisleben in 1482.

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  8. Margarethe Luder. "My husband Hans and I lived in the Thuringian village of Möhra as farmers, but moved to Eisleben because Hans wanted to try his hand at mining. Back then, we lived in a timber-frame house in the St. Peter’s quarter.

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