[Home]History of Erasmus Alberus

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Revision 2 . . August 22, 2001 4:36 pm by (logged).99.203.xxx [Initial text from 1911 encyclopedia -- please update as needed]
Revision 1 . . August 22, 2001 11:50 am by (logged).99.203.xxx [Initial text from 1911 encyclopedia -- please update as needed]
  

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Changed: 22c22,42
and humanistic way
and humanistic way; it does not appeal to popular passions
with the fierce directness which enabled the master of Catholic
satire, Thomas Murner, to inflict such telling blows. Several
of Alberus's hymns, all of which show the influence of his
master Luther, have been retained in the German Protestant
hymnal. After Luther's death, Alberus was for a time Diakonus
in Wittenberg; he became involved, however, in the political
conflicts of the time, and was in Magdeburg in 1550-1551,
while that town was besieged by Maurice of Saxony. In 1552
he was appointed Generalsuperintendent at Neubrandenburg
in Mecklenburg, where he died on the 5th of May 1553.

Das Buch von der Tugend und Weisheit has been edited by W.
Braune (1892); the sixteen Geistliche Lieder by C. W. Stromberger
(1857). Alberus' prose writings have not been reprinted in recent
times. See F. Schnorr von Carolsfeld, Erasmus Alberus (1894).





Initial text from 1911 encyclopedia -- Please update as needed

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