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Malvenda, Pedro de

(162 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (c. 1505, Burgos, Spain – after 1561), important Catholic theologian of whose life little is known. In 1519 Malvenda began his studies in Paris, where in 1538 he earned a doctorate in theology. In 1540 he became chaplain at the imperial court in Spain. He took part in disputations on religion (Disputations, Religious: I) in Worms in 1541 and Regensburg in 1546, tried unsuccessfully in 1547 to win Philip of Hessen back to the Roman Church, and participated in the preparation of the…

Weismann, Christian Eberhard

(150 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Weissmann, Weißmann; Sep 2, 1677, Hirsau – May 22, 1747, Tübingen), a Pietist influenced by P.J. Spener, served churches in Calw, Stuttgart, and Tübingen; from 1721 he was professor of theology at Tübingen. His Introductio in memorabilia ecclesiastica historiae sacrae (1718/1719, 21745) was a substantial contribution to church history. Influenced by G. Arnold, it drew a gloomy picture of the Reformed and Lutheran churches of the 17th century. ¶ Weismann also wrote theological and devotional works, including his anti-Catholic Grund-Lehren (1729, 21737) and the…

Grumbach, Argula von

(154 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (b. von Stauf; 1492, Burg Ehrenfels, Beratzhausen – 1554, Zeilitzheim/Schweinfurt or after 1563, Köfering?) lived in Dietfurt/Altmühl and was the most important female pamphlet author in the Reformation (Pamphlets of the Reformation). When the University of Ingolstadt disciplined Arsacius Seehofer for holding Lutheran ideas in 1523, she wrote eight letters in which she attacked Catholics, motivated by the “universal priesthood” and with appeal to the Bible. She printed a total of …

Roos, Magnus Friedrich

(182 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Sep 6, 1727, Sulz am Neckar – Mar 19, 1803, Anhausen [now Herbrechtingen]), was influenced by J.A. Bengel and became one of the important late representatives of Württemberg Pietism. He was active as a Bible expositor, authored about 50 edifying works, and engaged in controversy with the Enlightenment. After studying theology in ¶ Tübingen from 1742 to 1749 and holding curacies in Tübingen-Derendingen, Calw, Owen/Teck, and Stuttgart, he became a pastor in Göppingen in 1757, and pastor and dean in Tübingen-Lustnau in 1767. From 1784…

Burk, Philipp David

(164 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Jul 26, 1714, Neuffen – Mar 22, 1770, Kirchheim unter Teck). The son of a teacher, he attended school under J.A. Bengel, studied theology in Tübingen, and was for a long time curate to Bengel, whose daughter, Maria Barbara, he married in 1744. After pastoring in Bolheim (now Herbrechtingen) and Hedelfingen (now Stuttgart), he became dean of Markgröningen in 1758 and of Kirchheim unter Teck in 1766. A pietist, he composed songs, wrote sermon guides (including Evangelischer Fingerzeig [Evangelical Pointers], 7 vols., 1760–1766), …

Elizabeth of Braunschweig-Lüneburg

(190 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (also: Elizabeth of Münden; Aug 24, 1510, Berlin? – May 25, 1558, Ilmenau). The daughter of Joachim I of Brandenburg married Erich I of Braunschweig-Lüneburg in 1525, assumed the government on behalf of her minor son Erich II (1528–1584) after her husband's death in 1540, and began the Reformation of the duchy in 1542 with A. Corvinus. After her son assumed rule in 1545 …

Sattler, Michael

(280 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (c. 1490, Staufen im Breisgau – May 20, 1527, Rottenburg am Neckar), a leading figure among the early Anabaptists in southwest Germany; in 1527 he wrote the Schleitheim Articles, an early Reformation confession (of faith) (III, 3) and church order (I, 2). Before joining the Reformation c. 1524, he had lived as a Benedictine in the abbey of St. Peter in the Black Forest, where he had recently been prior. In 1525 he joined the Anabaptists in Zürich, had himself rebaptized, and in No…

Animals

(4,680 words)

Author(s): Peters, Ulrike | Riede, Peter | Jung, Martin H. | Kruk, Remke | Engels, Eve-Marie
[German Version] I. Religious Studies – II. Old Testament and Ancient Israel – III. Christianity – IV. Attitudes toward Animals in Islam – V. Ethical Considerations I. Religious Studies Especially in the religions of primitive peoples, though also in some advanced civilizations, certain animals are attributed a special, sacred significance on the basis of their unique characteristics (size, strength, dangerousness, fertility, etc.), their ec…

Lotzer, Sebastian

(163 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Weygelin, Wergelin; Basty, Beste; c. 1490, Horb am Neckar – after 1525, Switzerland?). Between 1523 and 1525, Lotzer, a craftsman (furrier?) ¶ and lay theologian, published five pieces supporting the rights of the laity and the Reformation. Together with C. Schappeler he led the Protestant movement in the imperial city of Memmingen, where early in January of 1525 he participated in a disputation with Catholic traditionalists and helped introduce the Reformation. Writing in support of the rebellious peasants, the Baltringer Haufen, he composed the most import…

Keßler, Johannes

(204 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Lat. Ahenarius; c. 1502/1503, Sankt Gallen – Mar 7, 1574, Sankt Gallen). Keßler, born into a poor family, studied in Basel, where he was taught by Erasmus of Rotterdam, and from 1522 in Wittenberg, where he was taught by Luther and Melanchthon. Deliberately rejecting ordination and making his living as a saddler in Sankt Gallen, in 1524 he began his work for the Reformation by delivering open lectures on the Bible, which he called Lesinen. He also taught languages at the Latin school. He married in 1525. J. v. Watt's closest coworker, he became the lea…

Strauß, Jakob

(189 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (c. 1480, Basel – after 1526), began his theological studies as a Dominican in Freiburg im Breisgau in 1516 and earned his doctorate in theology before he joined the Reformation movement in 1521. Initially he preached Reformation theology in the vicinity of Innsbruck. In 1522 he visited Wittenberg and then went to Wertheim am Main. From 1523 to 1525 he preached in Eisenach (Thuringia), where his 51 theses against the charging of interest triggered the “Eisenach usury controversy” …

Pappus, Johannes

(168 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Jan 16, 1549, Lindau – Jul 13, 1610, Straßburg [Strasbourg]) studied in Straßburg, Tübingen (Dr.theol. 1573) and Basel. Beginning in 1570, ¶ he taught at Straßburg, first as professor of Hebrew, then as professor of history; in 1578 he was appointed professor of theology and pastor of Straßburg Minster. After the death of J. Marbach in 1581, as head of the church in Straßburg he suppressed the remnants of Reformed practice and enforced Lutheranism. This brought him into conflict with Johannes Sturm, who published an Antipappus in 1578. The church order of 1598 ac…

Griesinger, Georg Friedrich

(164 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Mar 16, 1734, Dornhan-Marschalkenzimmern – Apr 27, 1828, Stuttgart) advocated in the Church of Württenberg a moderate Enlightenment theology (Rationalism: III), eschewing the doctrine of inspiration, but holding firmly to biblicism and belief in revelation, and authored many works of exegesis and systematic theology. After studying theology in Tübingen, from 1766 he was a minister in Stuttgart, and was Consistorial Councilor from 1786 until his retirement in 1822. He played a sig…

Heilbrunner, Jakob

(210 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (also: Hailbronner; Aug 15, 1548, Eberdingen – Jun 11, 1618, Bebenhausen), completed theological studies in Tübingen in 1573 and then, like many in his day, went to Austria and served as a pastor in Vienna, Riegersburg (Moravia), and Sitzendorf on the Schmida. In 1575 he became court preacher in Pfalz-Zweibrücken but lost that position in 1580, when the Count Palatine Johann moved from the Lutheran to the Reformed confession. From 1581 to 1585 Heilbrunner was general superintenden…

Cruciger

(268 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] 1. Caspar (the Elder; Jan 1, 1504, Leipzig – Nov 16, 1548, Wittenberg) studied in Leipzig (1513–1523) and Wittenberg, and became preacher and schoolmaster in Magdeburg in 1525. Returning to Wittenberg in 1528, he earned his doctorate in 1533. As professor of theology and collaborator of Luther (Bible revision, printing of sermons, edition of Luther's works) and Melanchthon (Disputations, Religious; Augsburg Interim), he ¶ sparked off a dispute over justification in 1536, when he called for repentance and good deeds. He played a part in the reformation of L…

Renato, Camillo

(184 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Paolo Ricci, Lisia Fileno; c. 1500, Sicily – c. 1575, Caspano, Valtellina?), lived as a Franciscan friar in Naples, got into trouble with the Inquisition, worked as a private tutor in Bologna in 1538, became an advocate of psychopannychism (Soul), and was convicted and imprisoned in Ferrara in 1540 as a “Lutheran.” In 1542, he was able to flee to Chiavenna and to the Valtellina, which was at the time ruled by Graubünden, and worked there as a teacher. Excommunicated in Chiavenna …

Hemmerli, Felix

(189 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Latinized: Malleolus; Sep 11, 1388 or 1389, Zürich – 1458 [?], Lucerne [?]), canonist, priest (ordained 1430) and author. Hemmerli studied church law in Erfurt and Bologna and earned a doctoral degree in 1424. After 1412, he was a canon in Zürich and became cantor in 1428. He also held benefices in Solothurn and Zofingen. He participated in the Councils of Constance and Basel and promoted church reforms, on account of which an attempt on his life was made in 1439. In over 40 work…

Sturm, Beata

(165 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Dec 17, 1682, Stuttgart – Jan 11, 1730, Stuttgart), daughter of a jurist, was one of the most important women in Pietism; after her death, she was venerated as a saint. Apart from a brief period in Blaubeuren, she spent her entire life in Stuttgart. Par-¶ tially blind since childhood and orphaned at the age of 11, she deliberately remained single and several times “affianced” herself to Jesus. She actively committed herself and her fortune to helping the poor, the sick, and widows, so that later she came to be called the “Wü…

Brunnquell, Ludwig

(164 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (also: Scaturigius; Nov 17, 1631, Tübingen – 1689, Besigheim). This Württ- emberg theologian was from 1654/55 a minister in Großbottwar, Asperg and Löchgau, but after years of controversy with the Consistorium he was dismissed in 1679 as a supporter of Böhme and a dispensationalist. From 1685 he was a pastor in Flehingen (now Oberderdingen). He wrote several works, not all of which were published, and in 1677 he wrote a recommendation of P.J. Spener's Pia Desideria (cf. Spener, Theologische Bedencken I, 1, 1700, 341–352). The chur…

Fricker, Johann Ludwig

(178 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Jun 14, 1729, Stuttgart – Sep 13, 1766, Dettingen unter Teck). As a student of F.C. Oetinger, Fricker was a major exponent of Pietism in Württemberg. He already came under the influence of Pietism during his theological studies at Tübingen (1749–1752). He undertook extended educational travels, e.g. to Moravia and Hungary. He tutored in Amsterdam and visited England in 1757/58, where he came into contact with Methodism (Methodists). In 1760, he met S. Collenbusch and G. Tersteege…

Hutten, Ulrich von

(599 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Apr 21, 1488, Castle Steckelberg near Schlüchtern, Röhn – Aug 29, 1523, Ufenau Island, Lake Zürich). The humanist, publicist and poet (Jul 12, 1517, Poet laureate) was one of the most important adherents of the Reformation from the German knighthood. Hutten lived and studied from 1499 in the Benedictine monastery at Fulda, where, because of his weak constitution and in accord with his father's wishes, he was to become a monk and later a prelate, and from 1503 he studied in Erfurt…

Platter, Thomas

(177 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Feb 10, 1499, Grächen, Switzerland – Jan 26, 1582, near Basel). Following the death of his father, Platter spent his childhood as a shepherd. He acquired an education through travel (Ulm, Munich, Passau, Schlettstadt), and through contacts with Humanists such as Paulus Summermatter (died 1511) and Johann Sapidus (1490–1561). Around 1523, Platter became an adherent of the Reformation in Zürich under O. Myconius. On the occasion of the Disputation of Baden (Aargau) in 1526, he supp…

Rieger

(354 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] 1. Georg Konrad (Mar 7, 1687, Cannstatt – Apr 16, 1743, Stuttgart), representative of Württemberg Pietism and a popular preacher. Rieger was the son of a vintner. He studied theology in Tübingen from 1704 to 1710, and was active from 1721 in Stuttgart, first as a teacher, then from 1733 to 1742 as pastor at St. Leonhard’s, and finally in 1742/1743 as pastor and dean at the Hospitalkirche. He wrote the biography of B. Sturm and volumes of sermons. In 1737 he attempted to convert to Christianity Joseph Süß Oppenheimer (c. 1698–1738), a court Jew who had been condemned to death. Mar…

Myconius, Oswald

(183 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (also Molitor, actually Geißhüsler; 1488, Lucerne – Oct 14, 1552, Basel), important Reformer in Switzerland. He was the son of a miller (Lat. molitor), attended school in Rottweil, and studied from 1510 in Basel. From 1514 he was a teacher, first in Basel, then from 1516 in Zürich, and from 1519 in Lucerne, until he was dismissed as a “Lutheran” in 1522. From 1523 to 1531, he worked in Zürich for the Reformation, alongside Zwingli, as a teacher at the Frauenmünster. ¶ Finally back in Basel, as successor of J. Oecolampadius he became the head (Antistes) of the R…

Pregizer, Christian Gottlob

(354 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Mar 18, 1751, Stuttgart – Oct 30, 1824, Haiterbach), studied Protestant theology in Tübingen (1768–1773), where he was influenced by Pietism. He served as a teacher in Besigheim (from 1783) and as a minister in Tübingen (from 1779), Grafenberg, near Nürtingen (from 1783), and Haiterbach, near Nagold (from 1795). He was active in youth work and was a popular pastor and preacher. Beginning in 1801, a group of Pietists formed around him who – in reaction to the moralism of the Enlig…

Gengenbach, Pamphilus

(185 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (c. 1480, Basel – 1524/25, Basel). The Basel printer, bookseller and poet was the first 16th-century German dramatist and, influenced by J. Eberlin von Günzburg, an early adherent of the Reformation. He authored songs, politico-moral essays and plays. His most successful play was the Shrovetide drama Die zehn Alter dieser Welt [The ten ages of this world] (1515?), in which a hermit shares instructions for life with people of all ages, from childhood to old age. In the play Gouchmatt [Fool's mate], he criticized the moral state at the time (1516). In the poem…

Komander (Comander), Johann

(300 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (actually: Dorfmann; c. 1482, Maienfeld, Switzerland – between Feb 15 and 21, 1557, Chur). The most important Reformer of the Swiss canton of the Grisons was probably the son of a hatter. He attended the Latin school in Sankt Gallen and studied in Basel from 1502 to 1505, where he was awarded the Baccalaureus artium. From 1512, he was at first curate and, from 1521, pastor in Escholzmatt near Lucerne. In 1523, already with Protestant inclinations, he was appointed pastor by the co…

Hochstetter

(343 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] 1. Johann Andreas (Mar 15, 1637, Kirchheim unter Teck – Nov 8, 1720, Bebenhausen). Hochstetter was, as a leading churchman in Württemberg, the most important early proponent of Pietism in the region and was, consequently, called the “Württembergian Spener” already in the 18th century. After studying in Tübingen, he became a pastor there (1659) and then in Walheim, dean in Böblingen (1672), professor of philosophy (1677) and later of theology in Tübingen and general superintendent (16…

Oecolampadius, John

(563 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (actually Häuschen/Heusgen;name Graecized from Haus-Schein, “House-light”; 1482, Weinsberg–Nov 24, 1531, Basel), Humanist who came ¶ on his mother’s side from Basel, and became Basel’s (Basel) most important reformer. From 1499 he studied philosophy, law, and theology in Heidelberg, where he was influenced by J. Wimpfeling among others, and in Bologna; from 1506 to 1508 he worked in Mainz as princes’ tutor. In 1510 he was ordained priest and occupied the office of preacher in Weinsberg. After le…

Utenheim, Christoph von

(182 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (c. 1450 in Straßburg [Strasbourg] – Mar 16, 1527, Porrentruy, canton of Jura), a Humanist, was rector of the University of Basel in 1473/1474 and bishop of Basel from 1502 to 1527. He had studied theology and canon law at Basel and Erfurt. He devoted himself to church reform, convoking a synod in 1503 and commissioning J. Wimpfeling to draw up statutes to govern the activities of clerics and to provide for regular synods. The reform foundered on the resistance of the cathedral ch…

Schelhorn, Johann Georg

(169 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Dec 8, 1694, Memmingen – Mar 31, 1773, Memmingen) served as a teacher, Lutheran pastor, and librarian in Memmingen; he was a significant 18th-century scholar and a productive author (some 40 works), but is scarcely noticed by researchers. From 1712 on he studied at Jena and Altdorf, returning to Memmingen in 1718; there he was appointed librarian and deputy rector in 1725. In 1732 he became pastor of Buxach and Hart, near Memmingen, in 1734 municipal preacher, and in 1753 superintendent. He wrote on literary and ecclesiastical history (e.g. Amoenitates literariae, 14 …

Beurlin, Jakob

(201 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (1520, Dornstetten – Oct 28, 1561, Paris). While a student at Tübingen (matriculation 1533, baccalaureate 1537, M.A. 1541), he became a supporter of the Reformers' teaching. From 1546 to 1553 he served as pastor in Derendingen, near Tübingen (1549 in Sulz am Neckar). Upon graduation in 1551, he became professor of theology at Tübingen. The subjects he lectured on included Melanchthon's Loci, John, Hebrews, Romans, and 1 John. He served temporarily as rector and after 1557 as vice chancellor. …

Bolsec, Hieronymus Hermes

(83 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (died c. 1584/1585). The Reformation-minded former Carmelite from Paris went in 1550 as a doctor to Geneva. Arrested because of his criticism of Calvin's doctrine of predestination, he was expelled from Geneva in 1551 and later from Bern and Lausanne. His polemical biography of Calvin, written in 1577, influenced French Catholicism into the 20th century. Martin H. Jung Bibliography F. Pfeilschifter, Das Calvinbild bei Bolsec, 1983 P. C. Holtrop, The Bolsec Controversy on Predestination, 2 vols., 1993.

Schappeler, Christoph

(306 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (or Schepler, Latinized: Sertorious; 1472 St. Gall – Aug 25, 1551, St. Gall), Reformer of the imperial city of Memmingen, who played a role in the Peasants’ War. He studied and taught from 1498 to 1503 and from 1505 to 1510 in Leipzig (not Vienna), receiving his M.A. in 1501 and his licentiate from the theological faculty in 1510 (no doctorate in theology or law). From 1503 to 1505 and from 1510 to 1513 he worked in St. Gall as a teacher and then as a preacher in Memmingen, where …

Brastberger, Immanuel Gottlob

(168 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Apr 10, 1718, Sulz on the Neckar – Jul 13, 1764, Nürtingen), the son of a dean, studied theology in Tübingen, was a curate in Stuttgart, and pastor in Ludwigsburg and Oberesslingen (now Esslingen). Illnesses brought him to “conversion.” In 1756 he became dean of Nürtingen. The pietist was primarily active as a preacher, and published volumes of sermons: Evangelical Witnesses to the Truth (1758), The Order of Salvation (1759), and Observations concerning the Benefits of the New Covenant (1765). The Evangelical Witnesses (Ger. Evangelische Zeugnisse) underwent at l…

Pirkheimer

(469 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] 1. C(h)aritas. (baptized Barbara; Mar 21, 1467, Eichstätt – Aug 19, 1532, Nuremberg), abbess (from 1503) of the Clarissene convent in Nuremberg and an outstanding female figure (Women: IV, 2) of the Reformation period. The daughter of a patrician Nuremberg family, she entered the convent in 1479 to be educated and then took her vows, probably in 1483. She mastered Latin, read theological works, and corresponded with several Humanists. In 1525, when the Reformation carried the day i…

Kronberg, Hartmuth von

(183 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (1488, Oppenheim? – Aug 7, 1549, Kronberg im Taunus). An imperial knight related to Franz v. Sickingen and acquainted with Ulrich v. Hutten, Kronberg was definitively won over to the Reformation by Luther in Worms (1521). From 1521 to 1523, he wrote open letters (distributed as pamphlets) advocating the Reformation, to the emperor and pope among others, and helped implement the Reformation in Frankfurt am Main in 1522. He was placed under the imperial ban in 1522 because of his pa…

Brenz, Johannes

(527 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Jun 24, 1499, Weil der Stadt – Sep 11, 1570, Stuttgart). As the reformer of the imperial free city of Schwäbisch Hall and revitalizer of Protestantism in the duchy of Württemberg after the Augsburg Interim, Brenz played a leading role in the Lutheran Reformation in southern Germany. As a theologian, he made importa…

Watt, Joachim von

(317 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Joachim Vadian; Nov 29, 1484, Saint Gall – Apr 6, 1551, Saint Gall), Humanist and scholar. He began his studies in Vienna in 1501, where he was influenced by C. Celtis. In 1516 he was appointed professor of rhetoric; in 1516/1517 he served as rector, and in 1517 he received a doctorate in medi-¶ cine. His travels took him to Trent, Venice, Padua, Leipzig, Posen (Poznań), Breslau (Wrocław), and Krakow. For unknown reasons, he returned to Saint Gall, where he served as mayor several times (first in 1526) and together with J. Keßler in…

Moser

(511 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] 1. Johann Jakob (Jan 18, 1701, Stuttgart –Sep 30, 1785, Stuttgart), teacher of constitutional law and adviser on political and legal matters, was an adherent of Pietism. From 1720 to 1726 he was active in Tübingen, Vienna, Stuttgart, and Wetzlar. From 1726 to 1727 and from 1734 to 1736 he was a senior civil servant in Stuttgart, then director of the university in Frankfurt an der Oder. From 1739 to 1747 he lived in the Pietist community of Ebersdorf (Reuß county). From 1751 to 1759 a…

Bora, Katharina von

(164 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Jan 29, 1499, Lippendorf near Leipzig – Dec 20, 1552, Torgau). This daughter of an impoverished noble was reared in the Augustinian nunnery of Brehna and then in the Cistercian nunnery of Marienthon in Nimbschen where she took her vows in 1515. On Easter night in 1523, she fled and arrived at Wittenberg. On Jun 13, 1525, she married Luther, to …

Bengel, Johann Albrecht

(578 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Jun 24, 1687, Winnenden – Nov 2, 1752, Stuttgart). The teacher, pastor, and later prelate and consistorial councilor is the most important Württembergian Pietist of the 18th century. His contributions to exegesis and to New Testament text criticism and his chiliastic theory (Millenarianism) are significant. He exer…

Nazarenes

(1,116 words)

Author(s): Eder, Manfred | Jung, Martin H. | McKinley, Edward H. | Bringmann, Michael
[German Version] I. Brothers of Penitence The order of the Brothers of Penitence (Penitents of Jesus of Nazareth, Scalzetti [= Barefoot Friars], Nazareni, Ordo Poenitentium a Jesu Nazareno, OPoen) was founded by the Spaniard Juan Alonso Varela y Losada (1724–1769) in Salamanca in 1752. It was a contemplative and hermetic mendicant order, similar to the Franciscans in rule, organization, and habit, and active in the mission to the people and care of the poor (with a fourth vow until 1854: defense of th…

Jäger, Johann Wolfgang

(303 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Mar 17, 1647, Stuttgart – Apr 11 [not: 2], 1720, Tübingen), Lutheran theologian, was the son of a Württemberg official. He studied in Tübingen, received the M.A. in 1669 and, from 1671, was tutor to two sons of the duke in Tübingen, whom he accompanied to Switzerland and Italy. As professor of philosophy in Tübingen (from 1678), he initially taught geography and Latin, then Greek, later ethics, and finally logic and metaphysics. He became professor of theology in 1690, received t…

Thumm, Theodor

(159 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Thummius; Nov 8, 1586, Hausen an der Zaber [Brackenheim] – Oct 20, 1630, Tübingen), served as pastor and dean in Stuttgart and Kirchheim/Teck; in 1618 he became professor of theology at Tübingen, where he served several times as dean of the faculty and three times as rector. He devoted himself to controversial theology, with polemics against Jesuits, Calvinists, and followers of V. Weigel. The same purpose was served by his dogmatic compendium Synopsis praecipuorum articulorum fidei, nostro seculo maxime controversorum (1625, 21626, repr. 1704). Thumm played …

Venturini, Karl Heinrich Georg

(306 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Jan 30, 1768, Brunswick – May 25, 1849, Brunswick). The son of a musician, Venturini studied theology at Helmstedt from 1788 to 1793, where he was influenced by H.P.K. Henke, a proponent of rationalism. To earn a living, he worked as a historical writer. In 1794 he was appointed as a lecturer at Helmstedt. From 1797 to 1799 he worked as a teacher in Copenhagen; in 1807 he was appointed pastor in Hordorf, near Brunswick. From ¶ 1844 on he lived as an independent scholar in Schöppenstedt, near Wolfenbüttel. He had tried unsuccessfully to find a job as a lec…

Heynlin of Stein, Johann

(182 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Latinized: de Lapide; also: Steinlin, Lapidanus, Lapierre; c. 1428/1431, Stein, near Pforzheim – Mar 12, 1496, Basel). Heynlin, a scholar broadly trained in philosophy and theology, combined traditional Scholastic positions and methods with a modern humanistic sensibility. He studied in Erfurt, Leipzig, Louvain, and finally in Paris, where he became rector of the university in 1469 and received the degree of Dr.theol. in 1472. In Paris he established the first printing-press. Fro…

Sonntag, Karl Gottlob

(169 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Aug 10, 1765, Radeberg – Jul 17, 1827, Riga), Protestant theologian inclined toward moderate rationalism (III); he left a deep impression on the ecclesiastical and spiritual life of Livonia. After studying at Leipzig from 1784 to 1788, he became rector of the cathedral school in Riga. He was appointed senior pastor in 1791, assessor of the Livonian supreme consistory in 1799, and general superintendent in 1803. He deserves credit for reshaping the liturgy, creating a hymnal, prom…

Reublin, Wilhelm

(285 words)

Author(s): Jung, Martin H.
[German Version] (Röubli; c. 1484, Rottenburg am Neckar – 1559 or later). From 1525 to 1531, Reublin was a leading figure among the Anabaptists in southwest Germany, Switzerland, and Moravia; he influenced B. Hubmaier and M. Sattler. He studied at Freiburg im Breisgau and Tübingen, earned a master’s degree, and in 1521 was appointed parish priest of Sankt Alban’s in Basel. On account of his inflammatory preaching of the Reformation, he was expelled in 1522 and went to Witikon (Canton Zürich), wher…

Tier

(3,948 words)

Author(s): Peters, Ulrike | Riede, Peter | Jung, Martin H. | Kruk, Remke | Engels, Eve-Marie
[English Version] I. ReligionswissenschaftlichV.a. in den Rel. der Naturvölker, aber auch in einigen Hochkulturen wird bestimmten T. aufgrund bes. Eigenschaften (Größe, Stärke, Gefährlichkeit, Fruchtbarkeit etc.), ihrer wirtschaftlichen Bedeutung, Fremdheit oder Vertrautheit für den Menschen eine bes., sakrale Bedeutung zugeschrieben und sie werden als Träger bzw. Repräsentanten oder Vermittler numinoser Macht verehrt (Gott/Götter/Götterbilder und -symbole). Dieses auch als »Tierkult« bez. Phänome…
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