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Luther the Reformer: The Story of the Man and His Career is unavailable, but you can change that!

Engaging and authoritative, Kittleson’s important and popular biography is here—represented with a new cover and new preface by the author. His single-volume biography has become a standard resource for those who wish to delve into the depths of the Reformer without drowning in a sea of scholarly concerns.

of modern university teaching assistants, these teachers shaped the learning of the arts students to fit the demands of the curriculum in the professional faculties. Although Luther was technically a student of the liberal arts, his university education was a professional one in the most strict sense of the term. The most important subjects for Luther lay in what educators of the time called the trivium, which was composed of grammar, rhetoric, and dialectic. This included many of the subjects that
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