One of the best books in the famous "Revolutions" series at Verso, with a really great introduction
The two famous texts from Thomas Münzer (1489-1525), the short "Prague Protest" and the longer "Sermon to the Princes", convey the powerful rage of one of the key leaders of the German Peasants' War, who coined the motto : "Omnia sunt communia", e.g. "All things are common".
Edited in the "Revolutions" series of Verso Books ("classic revolutionary writings set ablaze by today's radical writers"), this volume includes a really GREAT introduction by the Italian writing collective Wu Ming, who describes here in interesting detail the influence of Munzer's figure on the genesis of their first novel "Q" in 1999, and on their famous "From the multitudes of Europe" 2001 manifesto, written for the Genoa G8 Summit.
Certainly one of the best volumes in this fine book series.