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Musical city walk
Saturday, 28 September 2024,  3:00
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Saturday, | 28.9. | 3 p.m. | Meeting point: Castle Church

19th WITTENBERGER RENAISSANCE MUSIC FESTIVAL

Musical city walk

Renaissance meets pop

Praetorius Consort Wittenberg | Wittenberger Hofkapelle & guests

This concert is part of the 19th Wittenberger Renaissance Music Festival, which is dedicated to the phenomenon of popular music - in short: pop - from September 20th to 29th under the motto "Thank you for the Music". The other ten events, including seven concerts, the historical dance ball, the musical city walk and the instrument exhibition, take place in other venues, in churches and in the old town hall of Lutherstadt Wittenberg.

Ticket 25 euros/reduced 22 euros

www.wittenberger-renaissancemusik.de

Location Castle Church

Events

03 Oct 2025;
12:00 - 12:30 Uhr
English Devotion
05 Oct 2025;
10:00 -
Thanksgiving Service with Holy Communion
08 Oct 2025;
12:00 - 12:30 Uhr
Midday prayer of the Preachers’ Seminary
10 Oct 2025;
11:30 - 12:30 Uhr
Public tour: "...at Frederick's home"
Why do we celebrate Reformation Day?

According to legend, on October 31, 1517, Luther nailed his 95 theses—his ideas and criticisms of the Church—to the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg. His ideas were so influential that they transformed the Church. They ultimately led to the founding of the Protestant Church—which is why this day is so important to us. On Reformation Day, Christians celebrate Martin Luther's courage in initiating the reform of the Church and the freedom that faith grants to every individual.

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The Thesis Door

According to tradition, on October 31, 1517, Martin Luther posted his 95 Theses in Latin on this door, inviting scholars to debate them. The purpose of this debate was to clarify whether the Church's practice of selling indulgences was in accordance with the teachings of Jesus. This marked the beginning of the Reformation. The original wooden "Thesis Door" was destroyed in the great fire that ravaged the church in 1760. In 1858, King Frederick William IV of Prussia donated the current bronze door, on the panels of which the Latin text of the theses is cast.