[permalink] [id link]
Johannes Bugenhagen ( 1485 – 1558 ) – Religious Protestant Reformation | reformer in North Germany, Denmark and Norway ; friend of Martin Luther.
from
Wikipedia
Some Related Sentences
Johannes and Bugenhagen
Denmark became officially Lutheran on 30 October 1536 by decree of King Christian III, and in 1537 the reconstituted State Council approved the Lutheran Ordinances which was worked out by Danish theologians and Johannes Bugenhagen, based on Luther's Augsburg Confession and Luther's Little Catechism.
In 1534 during the Protestant Reformation, Cöslin became Lutheran under the influence of Johannes Bugenhagen.
This occurred officially on 30 October 1536 when the reconstituted State Council ( purged of Catholics ) adopted the Lutheran Ordinances designed by the German Johannes Bugenhagen, which outlined church organization, liturgy, and accepted religious practice.
He also published two translations of works by Luther and Johannes Bugenhagen, interpolating his own interpretation of the Lord's Supper into the text.
Johannes Bugenhagen formulated a compromise, approved by Luther, that distinguished between the unworthy ( indigni ) and the unbelievers ( impii ).
After Ansgar, epithetised the Apostle of the North, Rimbert is revered as the Second Apostle of the North, besides the missionary Sigfrid of Sweden and the Reformator Johannes Bugenhagen likewise honoured.
Johannes Bugenhagen Pomeranus was the pastor of the Wittenberg town church and officiated at Martin Luther's wedding.
Johannes Bugenhagen, an alumnus of the university, was an important figure during the German and Scandinavian reformation as well as a good friend of Martin Luther.
The faculty of theology was founded when the university was founded in 1456. Notable theologians have studied or worked here, for example Johannes Bugenhagen who was a close friend of Martin Luther.
Johannes Bugenhagen, who introduced the Reformation in much of Northern Germany and Scandinavia was a student at the University of Greifswald and Thomas Thorild, a Swedish poet spent parts of his life in Greifswald.
Also in 1521, Johannes Bugenhagen, the most important person in the following conversion of Pomerania to Protestantism, left Belbuck Abbey to study in Wittenberg, close to Luther.
In Belbuck, a circle had formed before, comprising not only Bugenhagen, but also Johann Boldewan, Christian Ketelhut, Andreas Knöpke and Johannes Kureke.
The first Kirchenordnung ( church constitution ) was designed by the famous Pomeranian Reformator Johannes Bugenhagen, also called Doctor Pomeranus.
Johannes Bugenhagen ( 24 June 1485 – 20 April 1558 ), also called Doctor Pomeranus by Martin Luther, introduced the Protestant Reformation in the Duchy of Pomerania and Denmark in the 16th century.
Johannes Bugenhagen was always a pastor at heart, and because of his love for music, his family coat of arms shows a harp.
Johannes and 1485
Johannes Dantiscus, (, ), ( born 1 October 1485 in Danzig ( Gdańsk ), Poland – died 27 October 1548 ) in Heilsberg ( Lidzbark Warmiński ) was prince-bishop of Warmia and Bishop of Culm ( Kulm / Chełmno ).
The Venice Library was lost in 1485 during the collapse of the abbey's bell tower, but following the invention of movable type printing by Johannes Gutenberg in 1439, the rotting books had been saved in their entirety by making their first typeset copy " of about 1, 000 volumes ", with each typeset book containing 10 manuscripts.
Joannes Susenbrotus ( also spelled Susembrotus, also known as Johannes or Hans Susenbrot, 1484 / 1485 — 1542 / 1543 ) was a German humanist, teacher of Latin, and author of textbooks.
Johannes and –
Johannes Aventinus ( 1477 – 1534 ) is the city's most famous son, the founder of the study of history in Bavaria.
A reviewer concluded that Stickel brought forward every possible argument which would speak for that hypothesis, but he proved the opposite of what he had attempted to do ( Johannes Gildemeister in ZDMG 13, 1859, 289 – 304 ).
He then studied medicine in Berlin and Würzburg, particularly with Albert von Kölliker, Franz Leydig, Rudolf Virchow ( with whom he later worked briefly as assistant ), and with anatomist-physiologist Johannes Peter Müller ( 1801 – 1858 ).
1, pp. 297 – 310 ), written by one Johannes, a notary, and stating that Eusebius was called by Cyril to be his successor in the episcopate.
The most famous reformer of Estonian, Johannes Aavik ( 1880 – 1973 ), used creations ex nihilo ( cf.
* Johannes Uray: Die Wöhlersche Harnstoffsynhtese und das Wissenschaftliche Weltbild – Analyse eines Mythos.
Giovanni d ' Andrea or Johannes Andreæ, ( c. 1270 / 1275 – 1348 ) was an Italian expert in canon law, the most renowned and successful canonist of the later Middle Ages.
0.217 seconds.