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  1. the title of “elector,” had the larger but poorer area of Saxony that would be known as Electoral Saxony, or Ernestine. At the age of 22, Frederick assumed his father’s title of elector of Saxony. The chief castle was in Torgau, but Frederick had other castles in Saxony, including Wittenberg, Coburg and Wartburg. These

  2. Elector of Saxony, who believed all his subjects should get a fair trial, managed to secret him from the road outside Wittenberg to Wartburg Castle, about 125 miles (200 km) away. When Luther openly returned a year later, Charles V had become too embroiled in various wars to continue uprooting the Reformation movement. Amazingly, when

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  4. Frederick the Wise. A devout Catholic, Frederick the Wise became “elector” of Saxony upon the death of his father. Frederick had castles in Saxony, including Wittenberg and Wartburg, which would become important landmarks in the life of Martin Luther.

  5. Frederick III of Ernestine Saxony, commonly known as Frederick the Wise, became the first patron of the Protestant Reformation due to his defense of Luther during the early days of the Wittenberg reforms. A known patron of humanist letters and art, especially the work of painters Albrecht Dürer and Lucas Cranach, his founding of the university ...

  6. Price: $25.99/$12.99. 00:00. 00:00. It seems strange that much of the life of one of the men who saved the Lutheran Reformation is, in Wellman’s words, “unseen.”. We think we know so much about Frederick the Wise, the elector of Saxony who protected Luther in the early years of the Reformation (1517-1525), but we actually know little.

  7. England, and Frederick’s cousin, Duke George of Albertine Saxony,4 to select but examples. As one of the seven potentates who elected new Holy Roman Emperors, Frederick was a powerful man, but he was not untouchable—even 1 wa Briefwechsel [hereafter br] 2, no. 455, 5 March 1522, Luther to Elector Friedrich, about the

  8. Scholars have concentrated on Luther’s interactions with the elector of Saxony Frederick III, “the Wise” (1463–1525, r. 1486–1525), during the early Reformation. Less scholarly attention has been paid to the relationship between Luther and the electors of Saxony during the reign of Frederick’s brother John the Steadfast (1468–1532 ...

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