and the Age of Reformation, by 
Johan Huizinga 
 
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Title: Erasmus and the Age of Reformation 
Author: Johan Huizinga 
Release Date: October 5, 2007 [EBook #22900] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ERASMUS 
AND THE AGE OF REFORMATION *** 
 
Produced by John Hagerson, Juliet Sutherland, David King, and the 
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ERASMUS AND THE AGE OF REFORMATION 
JOHAN HUIZINGA
with a selection from the letters of Erasmus 
HARPER TORCHBOOKS / The Cloister Library 
HARPER & ROW, PUBLISHERS 
NEW YORK, EVANSTON, AND LONDON 
[Illustration: WOODCUT BY HANS HOLBEIN. 1535] 
 
ERASMUS AND THE AGE OF REFORMATION 
Printed in the United States of America 
Huizinga's text was translated from the Dutch by F. Hopman and first 
published by Charles Scribner's Sons in 1924. The section from the 
Letters of Erasmus was translated by Barbara Flower. 
Reprinted by arrangement with Phaidon Press, Ltd., London 
Originally published under the title: "Erasmus of Rotterdam" 
First HARPER TORCHBOOK edition published 1957 
Library of Congress catalogue card number 57-10119 
 
CONTENTS 
Preface by G. N. Clark xi 
CHAP. 
I CHILDHOOD AND EARLY YOUTH, 1466-88 1 
II IN THE MONASTERY, 1488-95 10
III THE UNIVERSITY OF PARIS, 1495-9 20 
IV FIRST STAY IN ENGLAND, 1499-1500 29 
V ERASMUS AS A HUMANIST 39 
VI THEOLOGICAL ASPIRATIONS, 1501 47 
VII YEARS OF TROUBLE--LOUVAIN, PARIS, ENGLAND, 1502-6 
55 
VIII IN ITALY, 1506-9 62 
IX THE PRAISE OF FOLLY 69 
X THIRD STAY IN ENGLAND, 1509-14 79 
XI A LIGHT OF THEOLOGY, 1514-16 87 
XII ERASMUS'S MIND 100 
XIII ERASMUS'S MIND (continued) 109 
XIV ERASMUS'S CHARACTER 117 
XV AT LOUVAIN, 1517-18 130 
XVI FIRST YEARS OF THE REFORMATION 139 
XVII ERASMUS AT BASLE, 1521-9 151 
XVIII CONTROVERSY WITH LUTHER AND GROWING 
CONSERVATISM, 1524-6 161 
XIX AT WAR WITH HUMANISTS AND REFORMERS, 1528-9 170 
XX LAST YEARS 179 
XXI CONCLUSION 188
SELECTED LETTERS OF ERASMUS 195 
List of Illustrations 257 
Index of Names 263 
 
PREFACE 
by G.N. Clark, Provost of Oriel College, Oxford 
Rather more than twenty years ago, on a spring morning of alternate 
cloud and sunshine, I acted as guide to Johan Huizinga, the author of 
this book, when he was on a visit to Oxford. As it was not his first stay 
in the city, and he knew the principal buildings already, we looked at 
some of the less famous. Even with a man who was well known all 
over the world as a writer, I expected that these two or three hours 
would be much like the others I had spent in the same capacity with 
other visitors; but this proved to be a day to remember. He understood 
the purposes of these ancient buildings, the intentions of their founders 
and builders; but that was to be expected from an historian who had 
written upon the history of universities and learning. What surprised 
and delighted me was his seeing eye. He told me which of the 
decorative motifs on the Tower of the Four Orders were usual at the 
time when it was built, and which were less common. At All Souls he 
pointed out the seldom appreciated merits of Hawksmoor's twin towers. 
His eye was not merely informed but sensitive. I remembered that I had 
heard of his talent for drawing, and as we walked and talked I felt the 
influence of a strong, quiet personality deep down in which an artist's 
perceptiveness was fused with a determination to search for historical 
truth. 
Huizinga's great success and reputation came suddenly when he was 
over forty. Until that time his powers were ripening, not so much 
slowly as secretly. His friends knew that he was unique, but neither he 
nor they foresaw what direction his studies would take. He was born in 
1872 in Groningen, the most northerly of the chief towns of the
Netherlands, and there he went to school and to the University. He 
studied Dutch history and literature and also Oriental languages and 
mythology and sociology; he was a good linguist and he steadily 
accumulated great learning, but he was neither an infant prodigy nor a 
universal scholar. Science and current affairs scarcely interested him, 
and until his maturity imagination seemed to satisfy him more than 
research. Until he was over thirty he was a schoolmaster at Haarlem, a 
teacher of history; but it was still uncertain whether European or 
Oriental studies would claim him in the end. For two or three years 
before giving up school-teaching he lectured in the    
    
		
	
	
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