- The
Tetrapolitan Confession (Latin:
Confessio Tetrapolitana, German: Vierstädtebekenntnis), also
called the
Strasbourg Confession or
Swabian Confession...
- Lindau, and Memmingen—adopted a
separate confessional do****ent, the
Tetrapolitan Confession because they were
influenced by Zwingli's
Eucharistic theology...
- Later,
Bucer sought agreement on
common articles of
faith such as the
Tetrapolitan Confession and the
Wittenberg Concord,
working closely with
Philipp Melanchthon...
- Meersburg, a
small town
across the lake. The city
first followed the
Tetrapolitan Confession, and then the
Augsburg Confession. However, in 1548 Emperor...
-
Luther and
Philip Melanchthon,
which marked the
breach with Rome The
Tetrapolitan Confession of the
German Reformed Church, 1530 The
Smalcald Articles...
-
conditional on
agreement to the
Lutheran Augsburg Confession or the
Reformed Tetrapolitan Confession. The
formation of the
Schmalkaldic League in 1531 and the...
- led to his
exclusion from both groups. In 1530,
Constance signed the
Tetrapolitan Confession, the „Zwinglian“
counterpart of the
Augsburg Confession, which...
-
rights helped to draw
peasants to Memmingen. The city
first followed the
Tetrapolitan Confession, and then the
Augsburg Confession. The
Twelve Articles: The...
-
cities of Strasbourg, Constance, Memmingen, and
Lindau produced the
Tetrapolitan Confession. This do****ent
attempted to take a
middle position between...
- In 1528,
Lindau accepted the
Protestant Reformation,
following the
Tetrapolitan Confession at
first and
subsequently the
Augsburg Confession. In 1655...