The article examines the role of the German Protestant clergy in propagating national values in the first half of the 17th century, a period profoundly shaped by the Thirty Years' War. The conflict served as a pivotal catalyst for the development of the German national consciousness within the fragmented states of the Holy Roman Empire. At the forefront of the propaganda of the emerging German national ideas were the Protestant princely elite and intellectuals of burgher origin, among whom Lutheran pastors and preachers played an important role. The Protestant clergy actively engaged in pioneering German scholary and educational assosiations, termed academies, which arose amid the Thirty Years' War. These intellectual circles cultivated German national values, emphasizing the inperative of German unity, the distinctiveness of a shared German cultural identity, and the Holy Roman Empire's exeptional historical and spiritual role in Europe. Prominent figures within this milieu included Johann Rist, Johann Klaj, and Johann Valentin Andrae, whose renown stemmed less from pastoral duties than from their contribution to Baroque literature. They were all prominent poets of the German Baroque. Reinforcing the social ties that had been shaken during the war and seeking reliable patrons in the form of German princes, members of the "Fruitful Society" (Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft), the main academy of the period, Rist, Klaj, Andrae, and some other clergymen actively resorted to national rhetoric, promoting national ideals in their legacy.
Arina Lazareva (Mon,) studied this question.