The indulgence with which Luther came into direct contact
through his parishioners was the jubilee indulgence announced by Pope Julius II
for the year 1510, the proceeds of which were to be used in building the new
basilica of St. Peter in Rome .
After the death of Julius II in 1513, Leo X revived this
indulgence. In March, 1515, he commissioned Albrecht of Hohenzollern,
archbishop of Mainz and of Magdeburg
and bishop of Halberstadt, to sell the indulgence in his sees and in certain Brandenburg lands.
Albrecht, who was heavily indebted to the papacy for the dispensation to hold
the three sees and for the pallium, the symbol of his episcopal authority in Mainz , borrowed the money
from the banking house of the Fuggers.
In return for selling
the indulgence the Fuggers and he were to get half of the proceeds while the
other half was to go to the papal treasury. Albrecht appointed as subcommissary
Johann Tetzel, a Dominican monk who had sold indulgences for the papacy and the
Fuggers since 1504.
The indulgence with which Luther came into direct contact
through his parishioners was the jubilee indulgence announced by Pope Julius II
for the year 1510, the proceeds of which were to be used in building the new
basilica of St. Peter in Rome .
The indulgence with which Luther came into
direct contact through his parishioners was the jubilee indulgence announced by
Pope Julius II for the year 1510, the proceeds of which were to be used in
building the new basilica of St. Peter in Rome .
After the death of Julius II in 1513, Leo
X revived this indulgence. In March, 1515, he commissioned Albrecht of
Hohenzollern, archbishop of Mainz and of Magdeburg and bishop of Halberstadt, to sell the
indulgence in his sees and in certain Brandenburg
lands. Albrecht, who was heavily indebted to the papacy for the dispensation to
hold the three sees and for the pallium, the symbol of his episcopal authority
in Mainz ,
borrowed the money from the banking house of the Fuggers.
In
return for selling the indulgence the Fuggers and he were to get half of the
proceeds while the other half was to go to the papal treasury. Albrecht
appointed as subcommissary Johann Tetzel, a Dominican monk who had sold
indulgences for the papacy and the Fuggers since 1504.
After the death of Julius II in 1513, Leo X revived this indulgence. In March, 1515, he commissioned Albrecht of Hohenzollern, archbishop of Mainz and of Magdeburg and bishop of Halberstadt, to sell the indulgence in his sees and in certain Brandenburg lands. Albrecht, who was heavily indebted to the papacy for the dispensation to hold the three sees and for the pallium, the symbol of his episcopal authority in Mainz, borrowed the money from the banking house of the Fuggers. In return for selling the indulgence the Fuggers and he were to get half of the proceeds while the other half was to go to the papal treasury. Albrecht appointed as subcommissary Johann Tetzel, a Dominican monk who had sold indulgences for the papacy and the Fuggers since 1504.
Luther, M. (1999, c1957). Vol. 31: Luther's works, vol. 31 : Career of the Reformer I (J. J. Pelikan, H. C. Oswald & H. T. Lehmann, Ed.). Luther's Works (Vol. 31, Page 21-22). Philadelphia: Fortress Press.
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