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7 answers

Wasn't it just the Lutherans for many years in Germany during the 1500s?

2007-11-18 00:33:54 · answer #1 · answered by Mickey P 4 · 0 0

Czech kingdom had both these religions at that time. it is the mean time between the protestant /hussite/ movement of the early 1420 and of 1621 which year was the beggining of re-catolisation. I would expect Germany to have a mixup of these two religions, Spain and other Habsburg countries strictly catholic

2007-11-18 00:42:26 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Get Tudor and Stuart Britain 1471 - 1714 by Roger Lockyer ISBN 0-582-35306-4. It is an excellent history of English and European history with the religious implications of that time

2007-11-18 02:05:49 · answer #3 · answered by Maid Angela 7 · 0 0

huh? you want a list of 1570 countries in 3 categories(catholic, protestants, both)?
-England-both
-France -both
-Netherlands- protestants
-Spain- catholic
-Germany-both
-Austria-catholic
-Sweden-protestants
-Italy- catholics
-Portugal-catholic
-Belgium- protestant
Thou you must take into account that as the Reformation happened around 1520-1530 probably most of the countries listed by me as protestant included both protestants and catholics

2007-11-18 00:40:56 · answer #4 · answered by Cipi 2 · 1 0

Scotland and England.

England was Protestant and the vicious Knoxist reformation was sweeping Catholic Scotland.

2007-11-18 00:27:08 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

See Martin Luther's rebellion against the Catholic Church(around 1500). all Christian religions (other than Catholic) stem from this. he was a German

2007-11-18 00:34:09 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

DO YOUR OWN HOMEWORK...................:-)

2007-11-18 00:44:55 · answer #7 · answered by Pattythepunk 3 · 1 0

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