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This anabaptist leader in south Germany was an important proponent of the spiritualist form of Anabaptism who died of the plague in 1527.
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Pilgram Marpeck
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Menno Simons
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Hans Denck
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Balthasar H¸bmaier
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Menno Simons founded the Mennonites.
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True
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False
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This German Anabaptist leader is sometimes referred to as a "magisterial" anabaptist because he was so popular in the towns in which he preached.
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Balthasar H¸bmaier
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Michael Sattler
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Andreas von Bodenstein Karlstadt
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Conrad Grebel
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This Swiss Anabaptist reformer baptized George Blaurock, a married former priest, on January 21, 1525, at the home of Felix Manz in Zurich.
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Felix Manz
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Conrad Grebel
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Michael Sattler
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Thomas M¸ntzer
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This Evangelical Rationalist emphasized the use of reason in addition to Scripture. This led to his rejection of the Trinity and his execution as a heretic in Geneva.
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Michael Sattler
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Thomas M¸ntzer
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Jan of Leiden
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Michael Servetus
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This "moderate" Anabaptist was able to avoid persecution because he was a civil engineer in Strasburg and Augsburg.
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Michael Sattler
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Pilgram Marpeck
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Conrad Grebel
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Hans Denck
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The body of this radical anabaptist and two others were placed in cages on the steeple of St Lambert's cathedral in Munster after they were tortured and killed.
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Michael Servetus
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Bernard Rothmann
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Jacob Hutter
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Jan of Leiden
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This radical reformer was a leader in the Peasants' War and was captured during a peasant uprising near Frankenhausen and beheaded outside the walls of M¸lhausen on May 27, 1525.
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Michael Sattler
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Jan of Leiden
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Andreas von Bodenstein Karlstadt
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Thomas M¸ntzer
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Co-founder of the Anabaptist movement in Zurich. He was the first Anabaptist in Zurich to receive adult baptism. He was burned at the stake on September 6, 1529.
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Conrad Grebel
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Georg Blaurock
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Felix Manz
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Hans Hut
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This German Anabaptist leader was baptized by Hans Denck in 1526. His Anabaptist beliefs tended to focus on apocalypticism and were more mystical-spiritualist in nature. He died of smoke inhilation in prison in 1527.
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Menno Simons
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Felix Manz
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Pilgram Marpeck
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Hans Hut
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Anabaptist leader in Tirol and Moravia. His strong leadership established a communal form of Anabaptism.
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Menno Simons
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Jacob Hutter
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Balthasar H¸bmaier
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Hans Denck
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He was a close associate of Martin Luther who eventually moved away from Luther's theology to become a Radical Reformer. He believed that all images should be removed from churches and that Christians must exhibit moral growth or sanctification.
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Andreas von Bodenstein Karlstadt
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Thomas M¸ntzer
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Kaspar von Schwenckfeld
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Conrad Grebel
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This German diplomat and radical spiritualist reformer's emphasis on the experiential aspects of Christianity led him to reject ìexternal practicesî such as baptism and the Eucharist.
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Andreas von Bodenstein Karlstadt
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Thomas M¸ntzer
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Kaspar von Schwenckfeld
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Michael Servetus
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Co-founder of the Anabaptist movement in Zurich. He became the first Anabaptist martyr in Zurich on January 5, 1527.
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Georg Blaurock
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Conrad Grebel
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Pilgram Marpeck
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Felix Manz
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South German Anabaptist author of the Schleitheim Articles.
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Pilgram Marpeck
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Bernard Rothmann
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Hans Denck
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Michael Sattler