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  1. Katharina von Bora (Lippendorf, 29 gennaio 1499 – Torgau, 20 dicembre 1552) è stata una monaca cristiana tedesca convertitasi al protestantesimo e successivamente diventata la moglie di Martin Lutero, principale fautore della Riforma protestante. È una delle figure più importanti della Riforma protestante per il contributo che ...

  2. Katharina von Bora (German: [kataˈʁiːnaː fɔn ˈboːʁaː]; 29 January 1499? – 20 December 1552), after her wedding Katharina Luther, also referred to as "die Lutherin" ('the Lutheress'), was the wife of the German reformer Martin Luther and a seminal figure of the Protestant Reformation.

  3. 17 dic 2021 · Katharina von Bora (l. 1499-1552, also known as Katherine Luther) was a former nun who married Martin Luther (l. 1483-1546) in 1525. She, along with some fellow nuns, escaped their convent with Luther's help in 1523 in response to his reform movement. Katharina is recognized as the stabilizing force in Luther's life, enabling his ...

  4. 20 ott 2017 · Katharina von Bora, wife of Protestant reformer Martin Luther, was no passive onlooker, as she's portrayed in this engraving. She was instead the savvy manager of the family farm (and...

  5. BORA, Katharina von. Moglie di Lutero. Nacque a KleinLaussig presso Bitterfeld il 29 gennaio 1499, dai von Bora, appartenenti a famiglia di antica nobiltà ma impoverita. All'età di dieci anni fu rinchiusa nel convento di clausura delle cisterciensi a Nimpsch, dove pronunciò i voti solenni nell'anno 1515.

  6. 30 ott 2017 · Katharina von Bora. 1499–1552. The Runaway Nun. By Kristin Tabb. On a chilly April night, twelve nuns crept silently into a fish wagon and waited for city councilor Leonard Koppe to begin driving, counting the tense minutes until their monastic vocation would end forever.

  7. 20 dic 2016 · Posted December 20, 2016. by Dr. Jack Kilcrease. Katharina von Bora is most famous for being the wife of Martin Luther. Traditionally, sources have suggested she was born in 1499. Nevertheless, because early modern Europe was lacking in birth certificates, there is no direct evidence of this.