“Austin’s examination of Christian attitudes to Jews during the Reformation throws fascinating new light on the turbulent history of early modern Europe. Bringing Catholics as well as Lutherans and Calvinists into his story, Austin shows that virulent anti-Semitism coexisted with a growing interest in the Hebrew language, stimulated by debates about the Bible’s meaning.”—Tony Barber, Financial Times, “Best Books of 2020: History”“Austin’s informative and lucidly written book represents a necessary and important addition to the corpus of scholarship on the fatefully entangled histories of Christianity and Judaism.”—Peter Marshall, Literary Review“The book paints a vivid picture of early modern tolerance. . . . Austin makes a compelling case both for seeing Jewish-Christian relations as fundamental to the Reformation, and for seeing the Reformation as having significantly shaped the course of Jewish-Christian relations.”—Debra Kaplan, Journal of Ecclesiastical History“A comprehensive, fluent, and judicious introduction to every important intellectual, political, and social aspect of the Jewish-Christian relationship in Early Modern Europe. . . . Poses a compelling argument for the complex role of the Jews in Europe’s emerging pluralism.”—Christopher Ocker, author ofLuther, Conflict, and Christendom“Impressively thorough and insightful, Kenneth Austin’s masterful survey calls attention to a long-neglected aspect of the Protestant and Catholic Reformations. . . . Engaging, enlightening, and authoritative, The Jews and the Reformation deftly analyses a very complex subject with aplomb, interweaving social and intellectual history with the uncommon flair one finds in all enduring classics.“—Carlos Eire, author of Reformations“Systematically analyses the attitudes of post-Reformation Catholics Lutherans, Calvinists, Anabaptists, to Jews. It’s a fascinating story, well told—and often surprising. Austin shows how varied anti-Semitism could be, and how different religious groupings could take remarkably different positions. The Jews and the Reformation makes it impossible to ignore attitudes to the Jews as part of Reformation history—it transforms the subject.”—Lyndal Roper