This day in history
- 1521
Martin Luther, the chief catalyst of Protestantism, defies the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V by refusing to recant his writings.
He had been called to Worms in Germany to appear before the Diet (assembly) of the Holy Roman Empire and answer to charges of heresy. Martin Luther was a professor of biblical interpretation at the University of Wittenberg in Germany. In 1517, he drew up his 95 theses condemning the Catholic Church for its corrupt practice of selling indulgences, the forgiveness of sins.
Luther followed up his revolutionary work with equally controversial and groundbreaking theological works, and his fiery words set off religious reformers across Europe. In 1521, the pope excommunicated him and he was called to appear before the emperor at the Diet of Worms to defend his beliefs. Refusing to recant or rescind his positions, Luther was declared an outlaw and a heretic. Powerful German princes protected him, however, and by his death in 1546, his ideas had significantly altered the course of western thought.
- 1996
In Cairo, gunman from the Islamic group, al-Gamaa al-Islamiya, shot dead 15 German tourists and one Egyptian.
- 1994
Ethnic violence spreads throughout Rwanda as Hutu gangs attack Tutsis, after the death of the Rwandan president, Juvenal Habyarimana.
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