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The lords provided the peasants with land so that they could make a living. Sometimes he gave them small animals to grow then kill as food.
it made them not die because then the king would kill them for no reason
Martin Luther did not support the Peasant's Revolt of 1524. He never took part in the revolt and he encouranged peasants to obey their lords and nobles. The reason nobles and landlords frowned upon Martin Luther was the fact that he started the Reformation Era, one of the causes sparking the boldness in peasants to start Peasant's Revolt.
Peasants did not kill the tsar and his family, they were taken down to a basement and shot by Bolsheviks. They were not justified to killing them either though.
Knights were not simply allowed to kill peasants. I know of no secular laws that allowed this, and Church law certainly would not, unless the peasants were guilty of some crime. A country that gave knights free reign to do such a thing would have been at odds with the Church very quickly. It was allowed in ancient Rome, but even in ancient Rome, the laws had changed.
Luther's Admonition to Peace was written in May 1525 as a response to the Twelve Articles of the Peasants in Swabia. It was a call for reconciliation and urged both the rulers and the peasants to seek peace instead of resorting to violence in the Peasants' War.
The result of what is known as the German Peasants' War was a crushing of the revolt. Tens of thousands of peasants were killed.
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Malte Hohn has written: 'Die rechtlichen Folgen des Bauernkrieges von 1525' -- subject(s): Peasants' War, 1524-1525, Serfdom, History
Giambattista di Sardagna has written: 'La guerra rustica nel Trentino (1525)' -- subject(s): Peasants' War, 1524-1525, History
Sven Tode has written: 'Stadt im Bauernkrieg 1525' -- subject(s): History, Peasants' War, 1524-1525, Cities and towns, Peasant uprisings
Hans-Hermann Garlepp has written: 'Der Bauernkrieg von 1525 um Biberach a.d. Riss' -- subject(s): History, Peasants' War, 1524-1525
The German Peasants' War of 1525 ultimately ended in failure. Despite initial successes, the peasant forces were suppressed by the ruling nobility and their allies, resulting in a significant number of casualties among the peasant rebels. The revolt was brutally crushed, leading to the further entrenchment of serfdom and feudal power structures in the region.
Wilhelm Vogt has written: 'Die vorgeschichte des bauernkrieges' -- subject(s): Peasants' War, 1524-1525
by two people having sex man and a man ive gota giant penis lol
They wouldn't kill the peasants! They had laws in Ancient Egypt, it was a civilized society.
Kyle C. Sessions has written: 'Reformation and authority' -- subject(s): Peasants' War, 1524-1525, Reformation