preview

The End Of Anti Clerical Legislations

Better Essays

The moment that tension first blossomed between Catholics and Protestants in Germany can be traced back to 1517, when a disillusioned priest first nailed his 95 theses to a church door. The Thirty Years’ War that resulted was fought to resolve this religious tension, but only bitter compromise was found at the war’s end. In the centuries that followed, relations between the two religions vacillated from civil to hostile within, and between, each German state. When unification appeared to be a distinct possibility around 1870, the dominant German state, Prussia, searched for possible solutions to this three-hundred year old hostility in such a way that would strengthen the new empire rather than hinder it. The answer came in the form …show more content…

Coincidence was most likely to blame for these two events occurring within hours of each other, but some politicians used this timing as an excuse to further their own agendas. Prussian chancellor Otto von Bismarck was quick to emphasize France’s close ties with the Catholic Church, hoping that the country’s religious loyalties might isolate her from potential Protestant allies like Britain. He then planned a domestic Kulturkampf, or cultural struggle, against the foreign influence of the Church within German borders. This struggle would serve a dual purpose: to endear Germany to Protestant nations who faced similar problems with their own domestic Catholic rabble-rousers and to unify the German states with a common purpose under Prussian leadership. Attaining initial legislative support for this plan was not difficult for Bismarck. While Bismarck was far more conservative than liberal, he did recognize a shared nationalism in the Liberal Party that could be utilized, at least temporarily, to further his goals. Prussian Liberals dominated the Reichstag once Germany was unified, and most of the Liberal elites were eager for the new Reich to reflect their own Protestant morals and culture. Protestantism was believed to be an “educated, progressive, and nationally oriented” religion, emphasizing the German ideal of private worship. The Church, on the other hand, was considered dangerous because of its foreign

Get Access