History Daily - The Edict of Worms

Episode Date: May 25, 2026

May 25, 1521. The Edict of Worms marks the beginning of the Protestant Reformation in Europe. This episode originally aired in 2023. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more.... History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.

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Starting point is 00:00:07 It's June 1517 in the town of Magdeburg, Germany. Citizens clear the way as a column of robed monks marches through the town's narrow and filthy streets. At the head of the solemn procession, the monks carry a large cross, and fluttering in the breeze behind it, the papal standard, the flag of Pope Leo X, bringing up the rear is a heavily laden cart.
Starting point is 00:00:31 Johann Tetzel, a monk in sumptuous robes, stands atop it, blessing the crowd as he passes. Johann is around 50 with a broad belly and a kind face. And as the procession passes, the townspeople flocked behind it, all following the cart toward the marketplace. There, Johan clambers down to the ground as the other monks erect the cross in the center of the square and pull folded tables from the back of the cart. From boxes, the monks grab bundles of parchment certificates which they pile on the tables,
Starting point is 00:01:00 and then, finally, they place a large, ornate padlocked chest on the ground. By now a large crowd is gathered. Johann raises his hands, and in a cavernous voice, he calls for silence. Then Johann begins to speak, his voice echoing across the square. Johann preaches of God and heaven and the torments of purgatory. He's eloquent and persuasive, but he's as much a street hawker as he is a preacher. He's come here to sell the people of Magdeburg eternal salvation. Johann tells the crowd that for just a few coins dropped into his colleagues,
Starting point is 00:01:35 offer, they can buy what's called an indulgence, a parchment certificate from the Pope that forgives their sins and guarantees them entry into heaven. For a small extra payment, the townspeople can even secure the release of a soul already in purgatory, a loved one, maybe their mother, father, or even a child. With his honey words and smiling face, Johann prays on the people's guilt, saying as soon as the coin in the coffer rings, a rescued soul to heaven springs. It's not long before a line is winding around the square, and Johann's wooden chest is filling up with gold. In the early 16th century, the sale of these so-called indulgences is big business for the Catholic Church. Pope Leo X needs money to fund the expensive renovations of St. Peter's Basilica in Rome,
Starting point is 00:02:26 and men like Johann Tetzel are only too happy to persuade the poor believers of Europe to give up their coins for a chance of paradise. But the practice is controversial, outraged by Johann's salesman. a young German monk named Martin Luther will protest the sale of indulgences, and his writings will ignite a new religious movement in Europe, which will become known as the Protestant Reformation. It will be the most serious schism in the history of the Catholic Church, and it will begin in earnest when an edict banning Martin's teaching is issued in the German city of Vorms on May 25, 1521. There are still some places left on my European Christmas Market Tour, a winter wonderland whirlwind throughout France, Germany, and Austria. We'll drink
Starting point is 00:03:12 mulled wine, eat good food, and visit some of the most consequential historical sites in Europe. I'm really looking forward to it, and you can join me, but only if you act quickly. Over half of all available places are already taken. Tickets are on sale now. So reserve your spot. Go to historydaily.com and look for the Christmas Market section. That's historydaily.com. From Noisor and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham. And this is History. daily. History is made every day. On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world. Today is May 25th, 1521, the Edict of Vorms. It's October 31st, 1517, three and a half years before Martin Luther's teachings will be banned. In his room at the University
Starting point is 00:04:22 of Wittenberg, Martin Luther hunches over his desk with a writing quill in hand. He thinks for a moment, then dips the quill in ink and scrawls his name at the bottom of a long letter to his bishop, Albert of Brandenburg. Martin is a monk in his early 30s, a popular professor of biblical studies. He's regarded as one of the brightest minds at the university. And for several years, Martin has been contemplating the nature of Christian faith, repentance, and forgiveness. Increasingly, he sees the sales of indulgence as a corruption, completely incompatible with the teachings of the Bible. and he's angry about what he sees happening in Germany where the poor are being encouraged to buy scraps of parchment that will supposedly free them from purgatory. For months, Martin has wrestled
Starting point is 00:05:05 with his conscience but done nothing about his concerns. Indulgences are approved by the Pope, after all, and Martin knows that opposing them could be seen as questioning the highest authority in the church. But today, he's pushed past his worries and decided to take action by writing a letter to his local bishop. In it, he provides a scholarly explanation of his concerns, entitled Disputation on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences, or 95 Theses for short. The young monk thinks this is a cautious, limited, and academic intervention, nothing too abrasive. But Martin doesn't just send his letter to the bishop. He decides to share his ideas with other academics as well. And at first, little notice seems to be given to Martin's ideas. But early in 1518, somebody
Starting point is 00:05:51 translates Martin's words from the original Latin into ordinary German. And within weeks, copies of his work are circulating throughout Europe. Martin's arguments are more radical than perhaps even he realized, striking at the heart of the Catholic Church. Quickly, he becomes one of the most famous and controversial men in Europe. Many in Germany embrace his radical teachings and ideas, and a movement for reform in the church begins to grow. This does not go unnoticed by the Pope. In October 1518, Pope Leo X forces Martin to explain himself and subjects him to a heresy examination in Germany. But this move only emboldens Martin, who feels that the Pope is now trying to silence him. The three-day hearing with the papal legate descends into a shouting match as the men trade biblical verses and theological arguments.
Starting point is 00:06:40 By its end, Martin still refuses to recant his beliefs. And to avoid arrest, Martin is smuggled out of town by his supporters, his fame only burnished by the fractious hearings. Back in Rome, the Pope grows more determined than ever to stamp out Martin's growing movement. At the beginning of 1520, he orders a meeting of cardinals and lawyers to examine Martin's original claims, and by May they have delivered their verdict. Two and a half years after Martin released his 95 theses, at a country estate on the outskirts of Rome, Pope Leo X sits down at a desk in his opulent library. Spread out on the table in front of him is the draft of a decree known as a papal bull ready for
Starting point is 00:07:19 Leo's approval. He picks it up to read. It's entitled, Bull Against the Errors of Martin Luther and His Followers. Its densely written text itemizes 42 alleged heresies in Martin Luther's work. It decrees that unless Martin recants these heresies, within 60 days of receiving the bull, he will be declared a heretic and arrested, and all his works will be burned. With the Pope's approval, the bull is dispatched, and two months later it is published across Europe. But still, Martin does not recant. His reply to the Pope's decree is public and dramatic. On December 10th, 1520, a bonfire is lit in Wittenberg, but it's not Martin's books that are thrown in the fire. Instead, Martin tosses a copy of the papal bull into the flames. After this display, reconciliation with the
Starting point is 00:08:07 Pope will seem impossible. But in the spring of 1521, in the German city of Worms, an extraordinary meeting will take place, and there will be one last attempt at saving the church from a damaging split. But in the end, its outcome will spark a revolution and contribute to the greatest division the church has ever seen. It's early April 1521, a month before the edict of Worms will be issued. A horse-drawn wagon lurches over a rough country road in central Germany. Sitting in the back is Martin Luther, accompanied by a few of his students and colleagues from the University of Wittenberg. A cold wind whips across the open fields and Martin wraps his cloak tighter around his thin body as he gazes at the horizon. In the distance, there's a smudge of smoke.
Starting point is 00:09:02 It's the town of Erford, one of the group stops on their way to the city of Vorms. Martin and his colleagues have been summoned to the distant town by the most powerful man in the world, the young Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. This 21-year-old rules over Germany, and much of the rest of Europe as well. He's a devout Catholic and despises Martin's work, so he's eager to enforce the papal bull against the rebellious monk and have him tried as a heretic. But Charles also knows that many people, people in Germany are sympathetic to Martin and have ignored the Pope's demands to arrest him.
Starting point is 00:09:35 Chief among them is Martin's benefactor, the influential Frederick of Saxony. Frederick believes that before Martin is condemned, the monk must have a hearing before a council of learned men. And since Charles relies on Frederick's support to rule as Holy Roman Emperor, reluctantly he is agreed to the suggestion. Promising safe passage, the emperor has asked Martin to come to the city of Worms for a hearing. The hope is that if Martin can be persuaded, to soften his incendiary statements, a reconciliation with the church can still be secured. But Martin has already unleashed something in Germany, a popular revolt against the Catholic Church and its teachings. As Martin's wagon draws closer to Airford, the town gates swing open and a
Starting point is 00:10:16 party of 40 men on horseback trot down the road toward the wagon. Martin's companions glance at one another, worried that the townsmen intend to arrest them. But when the horsemen ride up, the fears quickly fade. The men have not come to arrest Martin. they're here to escort him into town where a hero's welcome awaits. As Martin enters through the gates, people climb up the walls and perch on window ledges to catch a glimpse of the charismatic monk. When Martin preaches in the town that Sunday, the congregation is so large that it spills into the streets. By the end of his brief visit, it's clear that whatever happens at Martin's hearing,
Starting point is 00:10:51 it won't be easy for the Catholic Church to quell what the monk has begun. When Martin arrives in forms ten days later, he's greeted with even greater excitement than in Erfurt. Thousands of local people surge out of the city to welcome him, and trumpets play in the tower of the cathedral as Martin parades through the streets to his lodgings. But Martin is not the only famous face in Vorms. An imperial diet is underway in the city, a gathering of the most powerful men in Germany, including Charles V, the Holy Roman Emperor himself. They've all come to Vorms to discuss issues of imperial governance, public peace, and foreign and economic policy. These are the men that will hear Martin's case.
Starting point is 00:11:31 A day after the monk's ecstatic welcome informs, Martin is led into a small audience chamber in the palace of the local bishop. There Charles V sits on a gilded imperial throne and stares down his long nose at the troublesome priest. Huge piles of books and pamphlets stand stacked on a windowsill. The chairman steps forward and asks Martin if they are his works. And Martin confirms they are. Then he's asked,
Starting point is 00:11:55 Do you recant in whole or in part what you have written? This is the key question, and the whole room falls silent. There's a long pause, and then finally Martin requests an adjournment to consider his answer. So many of his works have been gathered, he cannot immediately say which, if any, he would now reject. There's a murmur of irritation from summon the crowd, but is quickly drowned out by shouts from Martin's supporters. With a scowl, the Emperor grants Martin's request. The hearing reconvenes the following evening. And still more people cram into the audience chamber, and the emperor's guards must elbow through the crowd as they escort Charles to his throne.
Starting point is 00:12:33 This time the young emperor is determined that he will have answers. And for his part, Martin knows that what is said in this room will echo around Europe, and he doesn't want to waste his chance. When he is asked for an answer to the question from the day before, Martin delivers a long and brilliant speech that turns the spotlight on his accusers, asking them who they truly serve, God or the man in the Vatican. Angered, the chairman of the hearing pushes for a simple answer. Does Martin recant his works or not? Cornered at last, Martin must speak plainly. He says, unless I am convinced by Scripture and by plain reason, for my conscience is captive to the Word of God,
Starting point is 00:13:11 I cannot and I will not recant anything. With this, the hearing will end in uproar. The defiant Martin will be led through the streets by cheering supporters. His arms held aloft in triumph, but Martin's enemies will be pleased too. The monk has confessed in public. Now all that would be left for the emperor to do is issue the edict that will confirm Martin as a heretic and deliver him to the Catholic Church for certain execution.
Starting point is 00:13:47 It's May 25, 1521, in the city of Worms, Germany. At the final assembly of the imperial diet, the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V presents an edict to the dignitaries, his imperial mandate against Martin Luther. In it, Charles declares that as emperor, it is his duty to defend his. defend the Catholic Church. Martin has publicly confessed to heresies. He is not recanted despite numerous opportunities to do so, so he must therefore be arrested and executed. But Martin isn't in Vorms anymore to face this punishment. Following his hearing, the popular preacher was allowed to leave the city unharmed. Charles V had promised him safe passage home. But Martin and his supporters
Starting point is 00:14:29 didn't want to take any chances, so they came up with a plan to whisk the monk away to safety with a fake kidnapping. In a forest, a hundred miles from Vorms, Martin's wagon was ambushed by armed men. The monk was bundled into the back of a horse and ridden off into the trees. Everyone assumed that he had been kidnapped and murdered by Catholic zealots, but in fact, Martin was taken into the protection of his benefactor, Frederick of Saxony. He's still in hiding when the edict of Vorms is issued. The edict not only condemns Martin as a heretic, but also forbids the sharing or promotion of his ideas. Effectively, the edict banishes Martin's growing number of followers from the Catholic Church. The emperor, Charles V, claims that the edict has the unanimous counsel and consent of the
Starting point is 00:15:13 imperial diet, but it took weeks of negotiation for the text to be agreed on, and despite the emperor's wishes, it will never be enforced in Germany. Because the edict is not a signal of the unified strength of the church. Instead, it's confirmation that the church is breaking apart. When Martin Martin sat down to write his 95 theses in 1517. He could never have imagined what he would unleash. A scholarly debate over the sale of indulgences quickly became something far greater and more disruptive. Martin's works challenged how European culture and society had been organized for generations. He kicked at the foundations of the Catholic Church, and the Catholic Church began to shake. Martin's ideas will launch what becomes known as the Protestant Reformation.
Starting point is 00:15:57 It is a religious revolution which will spark wars and atrocities and change the political map of Europe forever. And it will begin when Martin Luther was condemned. His ideas were outlawed and his followers were banished by the Edict of Vorms issued by the Holy Roman Emperor on May 25, 1521. Next, on History Daily, May 26, 1978, Action Park opens its gates in New Jersey and quickly earns its reputation as a America's most dangerous amusement park. From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham,
Starting point is 00:16:46 audio editing by Mohamed Shazid, sound design by Molly Bach, music by Lindsay Graham. This episode is written and researched by William Simpson, produced by Alexandra Curry Buckner. Executive producers are Stephen Walters for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noisor.

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