Johannes Janssen (born April 10, 1829, Xanten, Prussia [Germany]—died Dec. 24, 1891, Frankfurt am Main, Ger.) was a Roman Catholic German historian who wrote a highly controversial history of the German people, covering the period leading to and through the Reformation.
Reared in a staunchly Catholic home, he attended local schools and then studied at Münster, the Catholic University of Leuven (Louvain [1850–51]), and the University of Bonn (1851–53). After completing his dissertation at Bonn, he moved to Frankfurt in 1854, where he continued to study and also taught at the Catholic Gymnasium.
In 1857 Janssen decided to write his Geschichte des deutschen Volkes seit dem Ausgang des Mittelalters, 8 vol. (1876–94; “History of the German People from the Close of the Middle Ages”). His work, which ended on the eve of the Thirty Years’ War (1618), was based on the thesis that the harmonious relations between church and state during the European Middle Ages had raised Germany to a position of political and moral prominence that attained its height during the 14th and 15th centuries. Henceforth, Janssen concluded, the effect of the Reformation under the leadership of Martin Luther was a progressive weakening of the German social structure that gradually led to chaos and national deterioration.
Janssen’s work was enthusiastically received by German Roman Catholics but was bitterly criticized by Protestant historians for its extremely partisan viewpoint. Nevertheless, his stress on social and cultural history was extremely important in the development of German Kulturgeschichte (“history of civilization”) and is valuable for its detailed contribution to studies on the 15th century.