Search

Your search for 'dc_creator:( "Schneider, Hans" ) OR dc_contributor:( "Schneider, Hans" )' returned 68 results. Modify search

Sort Results by Relevance | Newest titles first | Oldest titles first

Verschoor

(240 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[English Version] Verschoor, Jakob (1648 Vlissingen – 1700 Middelburg), niederländischer ref. Separatist. Schon während des Studiums der Theol. in Leiden beargwöhnte F. Spanheim d.J. die Ansichten des Studenten. Ohne Examen begann er 1673 in Vlissingen mit der Veranstaltung von »Übungen« (Konventikeln), die er später an anderen Orten fortsetzte. Da er wegen seiner Anschauungen Mißtrauen weckte, bisweilen auch als Anhänger B. de Spinozas verdächtigt wurde, blieben seine Bewerbungen um Predigerstelle…

Rock

(148 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[English Version] Rock, Johann Friedrich (25.10.1678 Oberwälen, Württemberg – 2.3.1749 Gelnhausen), Hauptprophet der Inspirationsgemeinden. Auf der Wanderschaft als Sattlergeselle in Berlin für den Pietismus gewonnen, hielt sich R. nach der Heimkehr 1702 zu einem Erwecktenkreis in Stuttgart, der zum Separatismus tendierte. Unter dem Druck der Behörden emigrierte R. 1707 mit E.L. Gruber in die Grafschaft Ysenburg, wo er als Hofsattler arbeitete. 1714 geriet er unter den Einfluß der Inspirierten, wurd…

Rijnsburger Kollegianten

(243 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[English Version] Rijnsburger Kollegianten, niederländische rel. Gruppierung im 17. und 18.Jh. Als die Pfarrer der Remonstranten (Arminianer) nach der Dordrechter Synode verbannt wurden, richteten der Kirchenälteste Gisbert van der Codde und seine Brüder (Jan d. Ä., Arie, Jan d.J.) 1619 in Warmond, 1621 in Rijnsburg gottesdienstliche Versammlungen (collegia) ohne Pfarrer ein, die in Schriftlesung, Gebet und offenen Beiträgen (»freie Prophetie«) bestanden. Im Laufe des 17.Jh. kamen weitere Kollegie…

Tennhardt

(247 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[English Version] Tennhardt, Johannes (2.1.1661 Dobergast, Sachsen – 12.9.1720 Kassel), radikalpietistischer Wanderprediger. Der Sohn eines reichen Bauern, der nach abgebrochener höherer Schulbildung als Barbier, dann seit 1688 in Nürnberg als Perückenmacher arbeitete, hatte sich schon in seiner Jugend mit myst. Schrifttum beschäftigt, das auch seine spätere Religiosität prägte. Nach dem Tod seiner Frau erlebte er 1704 in einer der sich fortan oft wiederholenden Visionen die Berufung zum »Kanzliste…

Werner

(144 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[English Version] Werner, Johannes (1598–1659?), Wanderprophet. Der Bauer aus Bockendorf, Sachsen, fühlte sich 1629 durch eine Vision berufen, in der Folgezeit die »Veränderungen des Hl. Röm. Reiches« während des Dreißigjährigen Krieges prophetisch anzukündigen und zu kommentieren. So verurteilte er z.B. Sachsens »Verrat« im Prager Frieden (1635). Seit 1636 zog er mit dem schwedischen Heer und begleitete auch Truppenteile über den Westfälischen Frieden hinaus bis zu seinem Tod. Er forderte zum Kamp…

Nikolaus V.

(144 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[English Version] Nikolaus V., Papst 6.3.1447 – 24.3.1455 (Tommaso Parentucelli, geb. 15.11.1397 Sarzana, Ligurien). Nach Studien in Florenz und Bologna seit 1426 an der Kurie, 1443 Vizekämmerer, 1444 Bf. von Bologna, 1446 (in Anerkennung seiner Verdienste im Kampf gegen das Konzil von Basel) Kardinal, 1447 als Kompromißkandidat zum Papst gewählt. N. förderte nachhaltig Wiss. und Künste (Beginn des Renaissancepapsttums). Mit Friedrich III. schloß er 1448 das Wiener Konkordat (für die Beziehungen zw…

Zabarella

(145 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[English Version] (de Zabarellis), Francesco (10.8.1360 Padua – 26.9.1417 Konstanz), bedeutender Kanonist, Kardinal. Nach dem Studium in Bologna lehrte er ebd., in Florenz (Dr. utr. iuris) und Padua. 1410 wurde er Bf. von Florenz, 1411 Kardinal. Zur Überwindung des Abendländischen Schismas empfahl Z. den Konzilsweg und gehörte zu den wichtigsten Persönlichkeiten bei der Vorbereitung und erfolgreichen Durchführung des Konzils von Konstanz; eine wichtige Rolle spielte er bei der Formulierung des Dekre…

Poiret

(287 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[English Version] Poiret, Pierre (15.4.1646 Metz – 21.5.1719 Rijnsberg bei Leiden), franz. Mystiker. Nach dem Schulbesuch wurde P. Französischlehrer am gräflich hanau-lichtenbergischen Hof in Buchsweiler (Bouxwiller, Elsaß), studierte seit 1664 in Basel, Hanau und Heidelberg Theol., wurde nach der Ordination 1669 in franz.-ref. Gemeinden der Pfalz Hilfsprediger (Otterberg, Frankenthal, Mannheim) und 1672–1676 Pfarrer (Annweiler). In diese Jahre fallen die ersten Kontakte zum Pietismus in Frankfurt …

Ronsdorfer Sekte

(134 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[English Version] Ronsdorfer Sekte, entstanden aus einer philadelphischen Sozietät (Philadelphier) in Elberfeld. Im Mittelpunkt standen der Kaufmann Elias Eller (1690–1750) und die Bäckerstochter Anna v. Buchel (1702–1743; seit 1733 Ellers Ehefrau), die als »Zionsmutter« ekstatische Offenbarungen (Inspirationsgemeinden) über das bevorstehende Tausendjährige Reich (Chiliasmus) empfing. Ihr Sohn Benjamin (1734–1735) sollte der Messias sein. Sogar Pastoren, z.B. F. Schleiermachers Großvater Daniel (1…

Marburg, University of

(1,101 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[German Version] Founded by Philip of Hesse in 1527 as the first Protestant university in Germany, the University of Marburg (renamed the Philipps-Universität in the 20th cent.) was a product of the Reformation in Hesse; it also met a territorial need and served to consolidate Philip's sovereignty. The establishment of a studium universale, without the customary papal privilege, took place in the context of an educational program promoting Humanism and the Reformation. Imperial approval – and hence recognition of university status – had to wait u…

Quietism

(1,551 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[German Version] I. The Term The term quietism (from Lat. quies, “rest, quiet, silence”) was originally a polemical term for a particular school of ¶ Catholic mysticism. in the 17th and 18th centuries, whose spirituality was directed toward ataraxia (“tranquility”) as its highest goal. During the conflicts in Italy over its characteristic feature, orazione di quiete (“quiet prayer”), after 1680 the name quietists became attached to its advocates. A little later, probably in the context of the papal condemnation in 1687, the abstract term quietism was coined. II. History Quietism r…

Rothe, Johannes

(260 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[German Version] (Dec 2, 1628, Amsterdam – 1702, Friedrichstadt), millenarian prophetic preacher. Rothe was born into a patrician merchant family. After university studies and years of travel, during which he came under the influence of L.F. Gifftheil, he appeared in various Dutch cities as an inspired itinerant preacher called by God. In England his proclamation of a “fifth monarchy” (Dan 2:44; Fifth Monarchists) was interpreted as political propaganda for Charles II and prompted his arrest in 16…

Tennhardt, Johannes

(277 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[German Version] (Jan 2, 1661, Dobergast, Saxony – Sep 12, 1720, Kassel), radical Pietist itinerant preacher. After dropping out of secondary school, Tenn­hardt, the son of a prosperous farmer, worked as a barber and then after 1688 as a wigmaker in Nuremberg. As a young man, he was already an avid reader of mystical works, an interest that shaped his later religiosity, which involved repeated visions. In 1704, after the death of his wife, in a vision he experienced a call to be God’s “chancery cl…

Inspiration Communities

(256 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[German Version] are communities which arose out of radical Pietism and still exist today. As early as around 1690, ecstatic, visionary and prophetic phenomena became manifest in the Pietist movement. After the appearance of ecstatic prophets from the Camisards, who came to Germany via England and the Netherlands, German prophets and prophetesses as well started to appear as “mediums”; in 1714, they sparked an enthusiastic “inspirational awakening,” primarily among the radical Pietists, which was …

Rijnsburg Collegiants

(290 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[German Version] The Rijnsburg Collegiants were a Dutch religious group of the 17th and 18th centuries. When, after the Synod of Dort, the ministers of the Remonstrants (Arminians) were banned, the church elder Gisbert van der Codde and his brothers (Jan the elder, Arie, and Jan the younger) set up meetings for worship ( collegia) without a minister, in 1619 in Warmond and in 1621 in Rijnsburg, with reading of Scripture, prayer, and open preaching. In the course of the 17th century, these meetings were amplified by further collegia in other towns; the most important, in Rotterdam a…

Werner, Johannes

(157 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[German Version] (1598–1659?), itinerant prophet. In 1629 Werner, a peasant from Bockendorf in Saxony, felt called by a vision to spend the next years prophesying and commenting on the “changes in the Holy Roman Empire” coming during the Thirty Years War. He condemned Saxony’s “betrayal” in the 1635 Peace of Prague. After 1636 he marched with the Swedish army; even after the Peace of Westphalia (Westphalia, Peace of), he accompanied military units until his death. He called for war against the Cat…

Philadelphians

(184 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[German Version] This is a movement within the 17th-18th century mystical Spiritualism. The Philadelphian Society was founded in London between 1670 and 1694 by the visionary J. Leade with other English followers of Jacob Böhme. Applying the seven letters of Revelation to seven periods of church history, they believed that the time of “Philadelphia” (Rev 3:7ff.) was now beginning, with the gathering of the true children of God into the eschatological community. The Phila-¶ delphians kept a “non-party” distance from religious parties (confessions) and their teachings (…

Mel, Conrad

(190 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[German Version] (Aug 14, 1666, Gudensberg near Kassel – May 3, 1733, Hersfeld). Mel studied in Rinteln, Bremen and Groningen, and was influenced by covenant theology and the Reformed Pietism of T. Undereyck. In 1690 he became preacher in Mitau (Kurland), 1692 in Memel, 1697 court preacher, and, from 1702, also professor in Königsberg. Here he held conventicles and, influenced by G.W. Leibniz, devised plans for missionary work among the heathen. In 1701 he became a member of the Prussian Akademie …

Gruber, Eberhard Ludwig

(185 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[German Version] (Jun 12, 1665, Stuttgart – Dec 11, 1728, Schwarzenau), radical Pietist (Pietism). After studying theology (from 1683) and a period as a graduate student (1689–1692) in Tübingen, Gruber pastored in Württemberg (1692–1703, Großbottwar, 1703–1706, Hofen). His heterodox views (Millenarianism/Chiliasm, perfectionism), contacts with the enthusiasts and his impudent attitude toward fellow pastors and members of his congregation provoked conflicts that led in 1706 to his dismissal from th…

Haug, Johann Friedrich

(316 words)

Author(s): Schneider, Hans
[German Version] (often erroneously called Heinrich; Apr 17, 1680, Strasbourg – Mar 12, 1753, Berleburg). While still a theology student in his hometown, Haug was already involved in a fierce controversy concerning Pietist-Philadelphian conventicles. Following his banishment (1705) and a two-year sojourn in Esslingen that also ended with his expulsion ( Zeugnuß der Liebe an die Inwohnere der Stadt Straßburg und Eißlingen [Testimony of love to the inhabitants of the city of Strassburg and Eißlingen] (1708), Haug settled with his father David and his brothe…
▲   Back to top   ▲