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Confessio Im Konflikt Religiöse Selbst- Und Fremdwahrnehmung in Der Frühen Neuzeit
Mona Garloff / Christian Volkmar Witt (Hg.) Confessio im Konflikt Religiöse Selbst- und Fremdwahrnehmung in der Frühen Neuzeit. Ein Studienbuch © 2019, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co. KG, Göttingen https://doi.org/10.13109/9783666571428 | CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Veröffentlichungen des Instituts für Europäische Geschichte Mainz Abteilung für Abendländische Religionsgeschichte Herausgegeben von Irene Dingel Beiheft 129 © 2019, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co. KG, Göttingen https://doi.org/10.13109/9783666571428 | CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Confessio im Konflikt Religiöse Selbst- und Fremdwahrnehmung in der Frühen Neuzeit Ein Studienbuch Herausgegeben von Mona Garloff und Christian Volkmar Witt Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht © 2019, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co. KG, Göttingen https://doi.org/10.13109/9783666571428 | CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Die Publikation wurde gefördert durch die Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. Bibliografische Information der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek: Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über https://dnb.de abrufbar. © 2019, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co. KG, Theaterstraße 13, D-37073 Göttingen Dieses Material steht unter der Creative-Commons-Lizenz Namensnennung - Nicht kommerziell - Keine Bearbeitungen 4.0 International. Um eine Kopie dieser Lizenz zu sehen, besuchen Sie http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by- nc-nd/4.0/. Satz: Vanessa Weber, Mainz Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht Verlage | www.vandenhoeck-ruprecht-verlage.com ISSN 2197-1056 ISBN (Print) 978-3-525-57142-2 ISBN (OA) 978-3-666-57142-8 https://doi.org/10.13109/9783666571428 © 2019, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co. KG, Göttingen https://doi.org/10.13109/9783666571428 | CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Inhalt Vorwort .............................................................................................................. 7 Christian V. Witt Wahrnehmung, Konflikt und Confessio. Eine Einleitung ........................ -
Jacobus Palaeologus in Constantinople, 1554-5 and 1573
Jacobus Palaeologus in Constantinople, 1554-5 and 1573 Martin Rothkegel Th eologische Hochschule Elstal 1. Jacobus Palaeologus: Admirer of Islam and Radical Antitrinitarian The religious reform debates that disunited Western Christia- nity in the 16th century left a lasting imprint on Western civilization. Besides the traditional Roman Catholic Church, Protestantism with its various factions emerged as an alternative form of Western Ch- ristianity. The religious debates unleashed by the sixteenth-century Reformers demonstrably fuelled, in one way or another, many of the subsequent developments of the early modern West including the rise of capitalism, the Dutch and English early Enlightenment, and the pursuit of civil emancipation in seventeenth-century England and eighteenth-century North America. Religious diversity turned out to be an enriching resource for Western societies that enlarged the pool of possible solutions in situations when new challenges demanded new ways of thinking and acting. Special credit for contributing to the genesis of modernity goes to the Antitrinitarian thinkers of the 16th century who radically challenged one of the central dogmatic traditions of the Christian 977 OSMANLI ó STANBULU IV religion, the doctrine of Trinity. Although they were relatively small in number and formed larger communities only in Poland and Transylvania, the Antitrinitarians, stigmatized and persecuted by the Protestants as much as by the Roman Catholics, anticipated key concepts of the Enlightenment and of modern political thou- ght. The seminal implications of 16-17th century Antitrinitarian thought may explain the somehow disproportional attention that Antitrinitarianism, and especially its Socinian variety, has received from historians.1 While the celebrated Italian Fausto Sozzini (1539-1604) and his disciples often have been claimed as direct ancestors of moder- nity, this obviously is not the case with Jacobus Palaeologus. -
'Thejpurnal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies
'TheJPurnal of Medieval and Renaissance studies MANAGINGEDITOR:Mareel Tetel, Duke University AsSOCIATEEDITORS:Arthur B. Ferguson, Duke University Edmund Reiss, Duke University ADVISORYBOARD:Rino Avesani, Biblioteca Vaticana Hersehel Baker, Harvard University Andre Chastel, Unioersite de Paris Myron P. Gilmore, Villa I Tatti O. B. Hardison, Jr., Folger Shakespeare Library William S. Heckscher, Duke University Hans J. Hillerbrand, City University of New York Gordon Leff, University of York Franco Simone, Unioersitä di Torino R. W. Southern, Oxford University Eugene Vinaver, University of Manchester Bruee W. Wardropper, Duke University Volume 3 Durham, North Carolina Duke University Press 1973 Melanchthon and Dürer: the search for the simple style DONALD B.KUSPIT, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill I The intensity of the living tie between Albrecht Dürer and Philipp Mel- anchthon must have reached its climax in 1525-26, when Melanchthon was resident in Nuremberg and Dürer portrayed him," but at the time Me1anchthon had little to say that we know of about Dürer's signi- ficance for him. Even at Dürer's death (1528), apart from expressing shock," he had little response to Dürer's art or person. Instead of issuing encomiums, as Dürer's friend Willibald Pirckheimer and the humanist poet Helius Eobanus Hessus did," or participating with Joachim Camerarius in the translation of Dürer's works into Latin," Melanchthon remains peculiarly silent about Dürer; peculiarly, because it was the custom of the day to mark the death of a great man with eulogies, but more particularly because of Melanch- thon's known enthusiasm for Dürer as a great German." It was only in mid-career, in the 1540'S that Melanchthon, under the pressure of his own purposes, praised Dürer specifically in his capacity as an artist rather than for the reflected glory he gave his surroundings. -
Tessicini 1..1
ADAM MOSLEY PAST PORTENTS PREDICT: COMETARY HISTORIAE AND CATALOGUES IN THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES ESTRATTO da CELESTIAL NOVELTIES ON THE EVE OF THE SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION 1540-1630 EDITED BY DARIO TESSICINI and PATRICK J. BONER Leo S. Olschki Editore Firenze BIBLIOTECA DI GALILÆANA .III. CELESTIAL NOVELTIES ON THE EVE OF THE SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION 1540-1630 edited by DARIO TESSICINI and PATRICK BONER GALILÆANA Journal of Galilean Studies www.museogalileo.it BIBLIOTECA DI GALILÆANA III CELESTIAL NOVELTIES ON THE EVE OF THE SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION 1540-1630 edited by DARIO TESSICINI and PATRICK J. BONER LEO S. OLSCHKI EDITORE MMXIII Tutti i diritti riservati CASA EDITRICE LEO S. OLSCHKI Viuzzo del Pozzetto, 8 50126 Firenze www.olschki.it Il volume e` stato pubblicato grazie al contributo di ISBN 978 88 222 6254 7 CONTENTS PATRICK BONER – DARIO TESSICINI, Introduction . Pag. VII ADAM MOSLEY, Past portents predict: cometary historiae and catalo- gues in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries . » 1 TAYRA M.C. LANUZA NAVARRO – VI´CTOR NAVARRO BROTONS, Pro- phecy and politics in Spain: celestial novelties and the science of the stars, 1572-1630 . » 33 DARIO TESSICINI, The comet of 1577 in Italy: astrological prognos- tications and cometary theory at the end of the sixteenth century » 57 ISABELLE PANTIN, Francesco Giuntini et les nouveaute´s ce´lestes . » 85 ELIDE CASALI, Astrologia ‘cristiana’ e nuova scienza. Pronostici astrologici sulle comete (1577-1618). » 105 JOHN HENRY, Jean Fernel on celestial influences and the reform of medical theory. » 133 NICK JARDINE, How to Present a Copernican Comet: The Form and Tactics of Christoph Rothmann’s Dialexis on the Comet of 1585 » 159 MIGUEL ANGEL GRANADA, Tycho Brahe’s anti-Copernican cam- paign: his criticism of Maestlin and Thomas Digges in the Astro- nomiae Instauratae Progymnasmata . -
Acknowledgements There Are Several People Without
Acknowledgements There are several people without whose assistance this thesis could not have been produced. I would like to thank, in particular, the following: Dr Alan Marshal, my supervisor at Bath Spa University College, for his constant nagging to 'get on with it'; Professor Roger Richardson of King Alfred's for his support as my external supervisor; Bath Spa University College for a constant supply of Inter Library Loans, a bursary and a travel grant to Spain; The Andrew C. Duncan Catholic History Trust for a research grant; Mgr Peter Pooling and the staff at Collegio Ingleses, Valladolid, Spain for their hospitality and access to their Archives; Mgr Michael Williams, for his assistance at Archive General, Simancas; Fr Daniel Rees, Librarian, Downside Abbey, Stratton on the Fosse, Somerset for access to the monastic library; Dr Dominic Bellenger and Dr Elaine Chalus, for their support and suggestions; Dr Ratal Witkowski, for Polish biographies; Joan Pattison, Dick Meyer, Irene Stansby for French, Dutch and Polish translations respectively; and David and Louise for being there. I would also like to thank Dr Paul Hyland & Doctor Barry Coward for their useful comments and suggestions that have enabled me to complete this work successfully. This thesis is dedicated to the memory of Charlotte May Anderson (May, 1977). Phis copy has been supplied on the understanding that it is copyright material and that no quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement. Contents List of Illustrations Abbreviations Preface 12 Introduction 22 1. James VI and I and the Early Seventeenth-Century Political Scene 27 2. -
A Divided Hungary in Europe
A Divided Hungary in Europe A Divided Hungary in Europe: Exchanges, Networks and Representations, 1541-1699 Edited by Gábor Almási, Szymon Brzeziński, Ildikó Horn, Kees Teszelszky and Áron Zarnóczki Volume 3 The Making and Uses of the Image of Hungary and Transylvania Edited by Kees Teszelszky A Divided Hungary in Europe: Exchanges, Networks and Representations, 1541-1699; Volume 3 – The Making and Uses of the Image of Hungary and Transylvania, Edited by Kees Teszelszky This book first published 2014 Cambridge Scholars Publishing 12 Back Chapman Street, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 2XX, UK British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Copyright © 2014 by Kees Teszelszky and contributors All rights for this book reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. ISBN (10): 1-4438-6688-1, ISBN (13): 978-1-4438-6688-0 As a three volume set: ISBN (10): 1-4438-7128-1 ISBN (13): 978-1-4438-7128-0 CONTENTS Preface ........................................................................................................ ix In Search of Hungary in Europe: An Introduction ...................................... 1 Kees Teszelszky The Genesis and Metamorphosis of Images of Hungary in the Holy Roman Empire ........................................................................................... 15 Nóra G. Etényi The fertilitas Pannoniae Topos in German Literature after the Second Siege of Vienna in 1683 ............................................................................. 45 Orsolya Lénárt Forms and Functions of the Image of Hungary in Poland-Lithuania ....... 61 Szymon Brzeziński Hungary and the Hungarians in Italian Public Opinion during and after the Long Turkish War................................................................ -
The German Military Entrepreneur Ernst Von Mansfeld and His Conduct of Asymmetrical Warfare in the Thirty Years War
UNIVERSITY OF HELSINKI The German Military Entrepreneur Ernst von Mansfeld and His Conduct of Asymmetrical Warfare in the Thirty Years War Olli Bäckström 15.9.2011 Pro Gradu Yleinen historia Table of Contents 1. INTRODUCTION ...........................................................................................................................3 1.1 Ernst von Mansfeld ........................................................................................................................3 1.2 Theoretical Approach and Structure ..............................................................................................4 1.3 Primary Sources .............................................................................................................................7 1.4 Secondary Sources and Historiography .........................................................................................8 1.5 Previous Research on the Thirty Years War as an Asymmetrical Conflict .................................10 2. OPERATIONALLY ASYMMETRICAL WARFARE.................................................................12 2.1 Military Historiography and the Thirty Years War .....................................................................12 2.2 The Origins of Habsburg Warfare ...............................................................................................14 2.3 Mansfeld and Military Space .......................................................................................................16 2.4 Mansfeld and Mobile Warfare .....................................................................................................19 -
Neo-Latin News
44 SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY NEWS NEO-LATIN NEWS Vol. 61, Nos. 1 & 2. Jointly with SCN. NLN is the official publica- tion of the American Association for Neo-Latin Studies. Edited by Craig Kallendorf, Texas A&M University; Western European Editor: Gilbert Tournoy, Leuven; Eastern European Editors: Jerzy Axer, Barbara Milewska-Wazbinska, and Katarzyna To- maszuk, Centre for Studies in the Classical Tradition in Poland and East-Central Europe, University of Warsaw. Founding Editors: James R. Naiden, Southern Oregon University, and J. Max Patrick, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and Graduate School, New York University. ♦ Petrarch and St. Augustine: Classical Scholarship, Christian Theol- ogy and the Origins of the Renaissance in Italy. By Alexander Lee. Brill’s Studies in Intellectual History, 210. Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2012. x + 382 pp. $177. Petrarch’s opera is extensive, that of Augustine is extraordinarily vast, and the literature on both is vaster still. To bridge them successfully is a significant undertaking. Over the past fifty years, scholars have attempted this task, from classic studies by Charles Trinkaus (often discussed here) to more recent ones such as C. Quillen’s Rereading the Renaissance: Petrarch, Augustine and the Language of Humanism (1995) and M. Gill’s Augustine in the Italian Renaissance: Art and Philosophy from Petrarch to Michelangelo (2005). In a new study, Alexander Lee argues that “Petrarch’s thought on moral questions was derived principally from the writings of St. Augustine” (24). Lee contends that Petrarch, rather than being philosophically inconsistent as is often suggested, was especially influenced by Augustine’s early works, most notably the Soliloquies and the De vera religione, which provided him with an interpretive method for incorporating classical literature and philosophy into Christian moral theology. -
500Th Anniversary of the Lutheran Reformation
500TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE LUTHERAN REFORMATION L LU ICA TH EL ER G A N N A S V Y E N E O H D T LUTHERAN SYNOD QUARTERLY VOLUME 57 • NUMBERS 2 & 3 JUNE & SEPTEMBER 2017 The journal of Bethany Lutheran Theological Seminary ISSN: 0360-9685 LUTHERAN SYNOD QUARTERLY VOLUME 57 • NUMBERS 2 & 3 JUNE & SEPTEMBER 2017 The journal of Bethany Lutheran Theological Seminary LUTHERAN SYNOD QUARTERLY EDITOR-IN-CHIEF........................................................... Gaylin R. Schmeling BOOK REVIEW EDITOR ......................................................... Michael K. Smith LAYOUT EDITOR ................................................................. Daniel J. Hartwig PRINTER ......................................................... Books of the Way of the Lord The Lutheran Synod Quarterly (ISSN: 0360-9685) is edited by the faculty of Bethany Lutheran Theological Seminary 6 Browns Court Mankato, Minnesota 56001 The Lutheran Synod Quarterly is a continuation of the Clergy Bulletin (1941–1960). The purpose of the Lutheran Synod Quarterly, as was the purpose of the Clergy Bulletin, is to provide a testimony of the theological position of the Evangelical Lutheran Synod and also to promote the academic growth of her clergy roster by providing scholarly articles, rooted in the inerrancy of the Holy Scriptures and the Confessions of the Evangelical Lutheran Church. The Lutheran Synod Quarterly is published in March and December with a combined June and September issue. Subscription rates are $25.00 U.S. per year for domestic subscriptions and $35.00 U.S. per year for international subscriptions. All subscriptions and editorial correspondence should be sent to the following address: Bethany Lutheran Theological Seminary Attn: Lutheran Synod Quarterly 6 Browns Ct Mankato MN 56001 Back issues of the Lutheran Synod Quarterly from the past two years are available at a cost of $10.00 per issue. -
Ernst Von Mansfeld and His Conduct of Asymmetrical Warfare in the Thirty Years War
The German Military Entrepreneur Ernst von Mansfeld and His Conduct of Asymmetrical Warfare in the Thirty Years War Olli Bäckström Pro gradu 15.9.2011 Helsingin yliopisto Humanistinen tiedekunta Yleinen historia NOTE ON DATES Two differing calendars, the older Julian and the more new Gregorian, were used in the seventeenth century. The former calendar was still retained by Protestants in Germany, England, Scandinavia, and the Netherlands, while the latter had been adopted in Catholic Europe. For the sake of clarity, all dates in the older Julian form have been converted into the Gregorian form by adding ten days to them. NOTE ON CURRENCIES The following rates roughly match the different forms of currencies appearing in the text: Spanish escudos and ducats 1.5 German florins Germanthalers 1.5 German florins English pound sterling 6.75 German florins Danish/Swedish thalers 1-1.5 German florins Dutch guldens 1.25 German florins French écus 2 German florins French livres 0.7 German florins ABBREVIATIONS BANF Briefe und Akten zur Geschichte des Dreissigjährigen Krieges CSPV Calendar of State Papers Relating to English Affairs in the Archives of Venice EHR The Economic History Review HJS Historia Jyske Samlingar MF Mercure François NCMH The New Cambridge Modern History TABLE ON CONTENTS 1. INTRODUCTION 1.1 Ernst von Mansfeld 1 1.2 Theoretical Approach and Structure 2 1.3 Primary Sources 5 1.4 Secondary Sources and Historiography 6 1.5 Previous Research on the Thirty Years War as an Asymmetrical Conflict 8 2. OPERATIONALLY ASYMMETRICAL WARFARE 2.1 Military Historiography and the Thirty Years War 10 2.2 The Origins of Habsburg Warfare 12 2.3 Mansfeld and Military Space 14 2.4 Mansfeld and Mobile Warfare 17 3. -
Camerarius Extended Bibliography
Bibliography "Jahresbericht Über Die Fortschritte Der Klassischen Altertumswissenschaft." Jahresbericht Über Die Fortschritte Der Klassischen Altertumswissenschaft. (1873). "Retiarius." s.n.]. Ayres, Philip. Mythologia Ethica, Or, Three Centuries of Sopian Fables in English Prose. [Electronic Resource]., edited by Aesop. Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership: [Ann Arbor, Mich.],. Baron, Frank. Joachim Camerarius (1500-1574) : Beiträge Zur Geschichte Des Humanismus Im Zeitalter Der Reformation = Essays on the History of Humanism during the Reformation. München: W. Fink, 1978. Baron, Frank and Eckhard Bernstein. "Review of: Die Literatur Des Deutschen Frühhumanismus." German Quarterly 51, no. 4 (1978): 525-526. Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften. Historische Kommission. and Bayerische Staatsbibliothek. ADB & NDB-Gesamtregister. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, 2003. Becker, Reinhard P., ed. German Humanism and Reformation. The German Library ; v. 6; German Library ; v. 6. New York: Continuum, 1982. Bernstein, Eckhard. Die Literatur Des Deutschen Frühhumanismus. Stuttgart: Metzler, 1978. Bietenholz, Peter G. Encounters with a Radical Erasmus : Erasmus' Work as a Source of Radical Thought in Early Modern Europe. Toronto Ont. ; Tonawanda, N.Y: University of Toronto Press, 2009. ———. History and Biography in the Work of Erasmus of Rotterdam. Genève: Droz, 1966. Bietenholz, Peter G., Thomas Brian Deutscher, and Desiderius Erasmus d.1536.Works.English. 1974, eds. Contemporaries of Erasmus : A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Toronto ; Buffalo: University of Toronto Press. Borchardt, Frank L., Frank Baron, and Frank Baron. "Review of Doctor Faustus: From History to Legend (Humanistische Bibliothek, Reihe I: Abhandlungen, Bd. 27)." German Quarterly 52, no. 3 (1979): 401-402. Borchardt, Frank L. and Eckhard Bernstein. "Review of German Humanism." German Quarterly 58, no. -
A New Order of Medicine: the Rise of Physicians in Reformation Germany
Introduction INVENTING MEDICAL REFORM The physicians of Nuremberg gather, their heads bent in earnest consultation. Scholars and gentlemen, the doctors are bearded, gowned, and capped. Some wear robes, the loose and unstructured garments of scholars, while others sport the typical dress of nobles, including slashed doublets, fur trim, and intricately patterned cloth. Before them, seated apothecaries, in fashionable but unscholarly dress, tools in hand, look up to the clique of doctors. A single wise woman gathers plants for the distillatory equipment that will produce lifesaving remedies. On the far right, a patient lies in bed while another phy- sician inspects his urine. This image is taken from the frontispiece to Joachim Camerarius’s 1586 Kreutterbuch, a German translation based on Pietro Andrea Mattioli’s Six Books on Dioscorides.1 It depicts physicians at the top of a medical hierarchy. Other practitioners, medical materials, and even the garden itself—symbol- izing the local, medical space—all depend on the physicians.2 In this imag- ined world, the apothecaries are literally overseen by the physicians. Their low stools, hunched posture, and mechanical tools reinforce their lesser position. They are manual workmen, like the gardener and the woman gathering herbs. Although permitted to work in the garden, none of these practitioners share any part in the medical decision-making that so engages the physicians. The division is clear: the physician inspecting urine in the corner of the picture is the sole, learned practitioner allowed to undertake this diagnostic practice. Camerarius’s image presents the physician’s place as natural, but in 1586 the order of medicine was not so obvious.