RT Article T1 Philip Melanchthon's Humanist Politics: Greek Scholarship in a Time of Confessional Crisis JF Reformation & Renaissance review VO 24 IS 1 SP 23 OP 43 A1 Batson, Alexander LA English PB Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group YR 2022 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1804068195 AB This article examines how Philip Melanchthon utilized classical Greek texts in the confessional conflicts of the Reformation. In 1521, Melanchthon published a Greek edition of Aristophanes’ Clouds as a critique of sophistry, and in 1527 he produced a Latin translation of Demosthenes’ speeches Against Aristogeiton as a rebuke of Johann Agricola's antinomianism. In the 1540s, when the Reformation came under political pressure from the Holy Roman Empire, Melanchthon used a 1540 edition of Xenophon to plead for political aid from the French crown and a 1547 edition of Demosthenes to critique Charles V's aggression. Finally, in 1548, as Melanchthon came under fire from Catholics and Gnesio-Lutherans, he turned to Athenian oratory to defend himself in the Augsburg Interim controversy. As these episodes show, Melanchthon's Greek scholarship was intimately connected with his career as a reformer, and Greek proved to be a powerful tool in addressing doctrinal controversy and political conflict. K1 Greek K1 Aristophanes K1 Xenophon K1 Demosthenes K1 Humanism K1 Philip Melanchthon DO 10.1080/14622459.2021.1999783