On February 16, Dr. Caecilia Hein, director of the Reformation History Research Library in Wittenberg, will examine the timeless power of "demonizing images." Her lecture shows how imagery can shape, exclude, or empower people, both in the past and today.
The Sunday lectures take place every Sunday at 11 a.m. in the Wittenberg Preachers' Seminary (Schlossplatz 1). Access is via the visitor center. The events are public and free of charge.
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.