Before the printing press carried his words across a continent, before emperors summoned him to answer for his convictions, before the wars began, Martin Luther was simply a frightened monk in a thunderstorm making a promise he could not take back. That promise, and everything it unleashed, would consume Europe for the next hundred and thirty years.
The Reformation Wars traces the full, devastating arc of the century that broke Western Christendom apart, from the moment one professor's challenge to a corrupt Church fundraising scheme became an unstoppable revolution, through the theological battles of Luther, Calvin, and Zwingli, through the radical experiments of the Anabaptists and the terrifying spectacle of the Münster rebellion, through the blood-soaked streets of Paris on St. Bartholomew's Day and the scorched earth of the Thirty Years' War, all the way to the exhausted diplomats of Westphalia who finally acknowledged, in 1648, that the world they had inherited was gone and would not be coming back.
This is the story of how sincere religious conviction, political ambition, and the unstoppable momentum of new ideas collided to produce the most destructive series of conflicts in European history before the twentieth century, and how the rubble of that destruction became the unlikely foundation of the modern world most of us now inhabit without knowing its origins.
Thomas W. Ellsworth