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The Social Function of Schools in the Lutheran Reformation in Germany
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
Extract
One of the most interesting aspects of the German Reformation for us to ponder is that of the educational reconstruction attempted in all Lutheran states in the sixteenth century. Churchmen and politicians acted in close collaboration, first in response to the reformist zeal charging the Lutheran movement in its heroic years, later in meeting the procedural obligations laid down for officials in the established Reformation's institutional structure. They agreed on fundamental objectives and shared a coherent body of pedagogical suppositions. They had high hopes for the power of education to direct thought and mold behavior. In the new church-state symbiosis they recognized unprecedented opportunities for reform and were eager to act on them. For a time, religion and politics moved in unison toward the enactment of a program of schooling intended in its overall purpose to conform the young to approved patterns of evangelical and civic rectitude.
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References
1 For a general bibliographical introduction to this subject see Gerald Strauss, Luther's House of Learning: Indoctrination of the Young in the German Reformation (Baltimore, 1978), especially the notes to chapter 1.Google Scholar
2 From Luther's German translation of the New Testament and revision of the Vulgate, D. Martin Luthers Deutsche Bibel (D. Martin Luthers Werke: Kritische Gesamtausgabe [from now on WA]) 7: 69 and 5: 645.Google Scholar
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5 Luther to Elector Johann, 22 Nov. 1526, WA Briefwechsel 4: 134.Google Scholar
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13 Monumenta Germaniae Paedagogica (from now on MGP) 38: 253-54.Google Scholar
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16 An die Ratsherren, 31.Google Scholar
17 Ibid., 44.Google Scholar
18 Ibid.Google Scholar
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20 E.g., the Schulordnung of the Duchy of Braunschweig 1569; that of Saxony 1580.Google Scholar
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23 Duchy of Mecklenburg school ordinance for city of Güstrow. MGP 38: 472.Google Scholar
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34 Ibid. Repeated many times in other ordinances, e.g., Schleswig-Holstein 1542. Ibid., 36.Google Scholar
35 Valentin Trotzendorf in the school ordinance for the Goldberg Gymnasium, 1563. Ibid., 54.Google Scholar
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38 Vives, De tradendis disciplinis I, 3.Google Scholar
39 “Disciplinam omnem nihil aeque continet atque observatio regularum.” Ratio studiorum (1599) in MGP 5: 395.Google Scholar
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41 Vives, De tradendis disciplinis I, chaps, 4, 6.Google Scholar
42 From school ordinances for the Duchy of Zweibrücken, 1575, MGP 49: 122; 1581, ibid., 142; 1602, ibid., 159.Google Scholar
43 From visitation ordinance for Mecklenburg, 1541, MGP 38: 141.Google Scholar
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46 Ibid., 247(1580).Google Scholar
47 See the description given by pastor Georg Zeämann of Kempten, in his Schulpredigten of 1618 quoted in MGP Beiheft 1 (Berlin, 1916), 10.Google Scholar
48 E.g., Saxony 1580, Vormbaum, 237.Google Scholar
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50 Hanover 1536. Ibid., 32.Google Scholar
51 MGP 38: 210. Similarly Mecklenburg 1552, Vormbaum, 64.Google Scholar
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53 From regulations for the Fürstenschulen in Meissen, Pforta, and Grimma, ibid., 268.Google Scholar
54 E.g., in the regulations for special boarding schools for talented poor boys in Württemberg, ibid., 102.Google Scholar
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56 Vormbaum, 172-73.Google Scholar
57 Cf. Walter Sohm, Die Schule Johann Sturms, 109-18 on the essentially passive exposure to Scripture given in Johann Sturm's pedagogical program.Google Scholar
58 E.g., Württemberg 1559, Vormbaum, 71.Google Scholar
59 E.g., Schulordnung for the German-language school in Güstrow 1602, MGP 38: 473; Schulordnung for Darmstadt, 1594, MGP 33: 206.Google Scholar
60 E.g., Württemberg 1559, Vormbaum, 160-65.Google Scholar
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62 From David Chytraeus, Der fürnembsten heubtstück christlicher lehr nützliche erklerung (Rostock, 1578), quoted in MGP 38: 336-37.Google Scholar
63 For a discussion of the psychology of learning utilized in the Reformation, see Strauss, Luther's House of Learning, chap. 4.Google Scholar
64 Vormbaum, 32.Google Scholar
65 The unceasing appeals made throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries by Lutheran churchmen to parents, to send their children to school, suggests that popular response to educational opportunities was not always enthusiastic. And the evidence in visitation reports makes it possible to argue that schooling was less effective than had been anticipated in producing the hoped-for change in habits. For a discussion of the problem of response to Reformation pedagogy, see Strauss, Luther's House of Learning, chaps. 12-13.Google Scholar
66 Visitation ordinance for the Darmstadt Paedagogium 1655, MGP 27: 135.Google Scholar
67 From regulations for preceptors at the Domschule in Güstrow 1619, printed in H. Schnell, Das Unterrichtswesen der Grossherzogtümer Mecklenburg-Schwerin und Strelitz, MGP 44: 33.Google Scholar
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