no he does not. On the other hand, Martin Luther impacted the first enlightenment during the French Revolution.
They opposed it.
I'm pretty sure there were 3 I've heard of, one was french lived in the 1500's and found out that the catholics had translated the scripts of the Romans wrong. and then there was the black Americans martin Luther king and martin Luther king Jr. one of them was the first black president of America - i think - and fought against racial discrimination.
hum french revolution? you mean 1789 revolution?
No. The French Revolution was not an effect of the industrial revolution. The French revolution occurred due to the anger of the masses against the despotic rule of the monarchs in France.
The French Revolution was the republican uprising against the French monarchy and aristocrats.
le jour de Martin Luther king.
They opposed it.
Unless there are other people in Latin America also named Martin Luther and John Calvin, then No, the German man Martin Luther and the French man John (Jean) Calvin were not Latin American revolutionary leaders. Both of them were leaders in the Protestant Reformation in Europe in the 16th century.
I'm pretty sure there were 3 I've heard of, one was french lived in the 1500's and found out that the catholics had translated the scripts of the Romans wrong. and then there was the black Americans martin Luther king and martin Luther king Jr. one of them was the first black president of America - i think - and fought against racial discrimination.
the real diet of worms of in french the diet of worms were Martin Luther got sentenced to death??
Yes, it is based on the French Revolution.
except the Britain glorious revolution, which didnt influence anything, since Britain is an island, the French Revolution was the first popular revolt! PS: that has nothing to do with Hitler.
Because the French felt that anything that was bad for the United Kingdom was good for France.
They all revolted against the existing order: the French revolution against absolutist royalty; Napoleon revolted against (and forcibly overthrew) the then existing French government, the Directoire; and Luther and other reformers revolted against the Catholic church.
Louis XIV was not in the French Revolution, since he had died in 1715. I think you mean Louis XVI, his great-grandfather, though he did not act anything.
England and France had been at war with each other for centuries, and France had helped the Americans fight their American Revolution against the English. Therefore, England did not support anything French. Also, no other countries what soever supported the French Revolution.
Because anything that hurt the British, especially British world trade, was fine by the French.