Freiheitsleuchten – 500 years of Peasant’s War
Exactly 500 years ago, tens of thousands of peasants rose up in an unprecedented revolt—a historic moment that still resonates today. What began as a local protest against hunger, exploitation, and arbitrary rule escalated into a mass uprising: the Peasants’ War of 1524/25. But this “war” was far more than a brief flare-up—it was the climax of decades of social tensions, the first mass movement fueled by media, and the first articulation of human rights demands in German history.
Harvest failures, rising taxes, and the ruthless rule of feudal lords had long made life precarious for the lower classes. Enserfed peasants, in particular, suffered under a system that stripped them of rights. The emerging Reformation provided the intellectual spark for their protests, raising questions that remain relevant today: about social justice, the abolition of class and caste systems, and the universal dignity of every person. For the peasants believed freedom must apply to all—not just the nobility or clergy.
The printing press became the engine of escalation. This new technology enabled the mass dissemination of ideas for the first time. Pamphlets, especially the Twelve Articles—a sort of peasant manifesto—circulated in huge numbers, becoming the most-printed work of the early Reformation. Thus, the Peasants’ War became Germany’s first media-driven historical event. Yet the revolt against the supposedly god-ordained order was brutally crushed: over 75,000 deaths and countless destroyed livelihoods marked the bloody end of the struggle for freedom. Feudal rule prevailed—better organized, militarily superior, and tactically united.
In the following centuries, the uprising was often portrayed negatively—as a cautionary tale of how dangerous and futile resistance to the established order could be. At the same time, it also served as a warning to the powerful about the consequences of exploitation. Only in the late 18th and early 19th centuries did perceptions begin to shift. The Peasants’ War was reinterpreted: as an early expression of the will for freedom, a human rights movement, and an attempted revolution. Since then, the conflict has been repeatedly politicized. Ironically, both National Socialism and real-existing socialism claimed to be the fulfillment of the demands born from the Peasants’ War.
Today, the sites of the uprising symbolize an early yearning for freedom—hard-fought over centuries. They stand for protest, for societal upheaval enabled by media revolution, and for a movement that has been interpreted and instrumentalized in countless ways across the ages.
Application
“Freiheitsleuchten” calls on artists to illuminate and transform various sites in Mühlhausen’s historic city center with their installations.
We are seeking light-based artworks of all forms—classic large-scale projections with moving images, light sculptures, interactive pieces, purely scenographic approaches, traditional illumination art, walking acts, or sound installations. This open call is addressed to both individual artists and collectives.
For more information click here