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Topic: Jakob Hutter


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  Jacob Hutter - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jacob Hutter (b.?-d.1536) - Tyrolean Anabaptist leader and founder of the Hutterites.
Jakob Hutter was a hat maker from South Tirol (northern Italy today).
Jakob Hutter traveled often between Moravia and Tirol preach and baptize.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Jacob_Hutter   (270 words)

  
 Jakob Hutter
Jacob Hutter (?-1536) was a proficient organizer who helped lay the groundwork for the Hutterian way of life, which still exists today.
Hutter was a hatter (hat maker) by trade.
Hutter, in the name of his group in Tyrol, joined the Anabaptist group at Austerlitz in Moravia.
hutterites.org /HutteriteHistory/JakobHutter.htm   (207 words)

  
 Community of Goods
Jakob Hutter was first seen in Austerlitz in 1529.
Hutter and his helper Simon Schützinger had heard about Wiedemann's group and was so impressed that he united with this group, know as the Moravian Anabaptists, on behalf of his Tirolian group.
Hutter again came to Moravia in 1533 feeling the calling of God to be a leader among these groups.
www.hutterites.org /HutteriteHistory/re-communityofgoods.htm   (408 words)

  
 The NDSU Libraries: Germans From Russia
Jakob Hutter, a hat maker, had become an Anabaptist during the reformation and was chief pastor of a group at Tyrol.
Hutter now had the major leadership position and his teaching was for a thorough communal organization.
Hutter was forced to flee for safety but on the night of November 29, 1535, he and his wife were captured in Austria.
www.lib.ndsu.nodak.edu /grhc/outreach/conventions_speeches/klever.html   (3306 words)

  
 Josef Gabriel NACHOD
Karoline Jontof-Hutter was the daughter of the hat-colorer Jakob Isak Jontof-Hutter (b.
Jakob Jontof-Hutter was the son of the hat-cleaner Isak Löw Jontow (b.
One family legend, however, attributes the Hutter name to an ancestor's role as a protector ("Hüter") of the Jewish community during one of the numerous pogroms, fires and expulsions from Prague during the 18th Century.
www.angelfire.com /music/schoenberg/PS01/PS01_014.HTM   (783 words)

  
 Sun dog - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
And this I, Jakob, saw with my own eyes, and many brothers and sisters saw it with me. After a while the two suns and rainbows disappeared, and only the one sun remained.
The original was written in German, and is from a letter originally sent in November 1533 from Auspitz in Moravia to the Adige Valley in Tirol.
The Kuntz Maurer and Michel Schuster mentioned in the letter left Jakob Hutter on the Thursday after the feast day of Simon and Jude, which is October 28.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Parhelion   (973 words)

  
 Adige Valley (Südtirol, Austria)
Thus on 4 April 1528, directives were sent to the authorities of Bozen to treat the Anabaptist prisoners with lenience "without injuring their honor" (without applying the Horb penalty) because of their ignorance, and to dismiss them with a suitable fine.
In the same year Joerg Zaunring, Hutter's later companion and treasurer, and Kürschner (or Klesinger), who was baptized by him, were active at Leifers and Kaltem.
In the district of Guffidaun Jakob Hutter led a meeting in which 150 persons took communion.
www.gameo.org /encyclopedia/contents/A271.html   (977 words)

  
 PmWiki | Main / Hutterian Brethren
Also known as Hutterites, they took their name from their original leader, Jakob Hutter, who was burned as a heretic in 1536.
In 1529 Jacob Hutter from the Tyrol with a group of refugees visited the colonies in Moravia.
Jacob Hutter was burned at the stake in Innsbruck, Austria, in 1536 for refusing to renounce his faith.
www.societyofcontrol.com /ppmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/HutterianBrethren   (915 words)

  
 Family Tree Maker's Genealogy Site: User Home Pages: Erv Hutter's Genealogy Homepage
The following names are common: Hutter, Eichinger, Appold, Waldbauer, Helmreich, Riegel, Rieger, Schwab, Beiser, Arnold, Behmlander, Bellhorn, Bluhm, Kraenzlein, Feinauer, Foerster, Heumann, Leinberger, Hufnagel, Wuepper, Kernstock, Kloha, Kolb, List,Lutz, Mueller,Nuffer, Reinhardt,Roedel, Ruediger,Ruegenstein, Staudacher,etc. most are natives of Bay County, Michigan USA and most are decended from Frankische Germans.
This couple is the progenitor of the Hutter Family in America.
"Jakob" Hutter was born in Haunsheim, Dillingen, Bavaria in 1842 the illigitimate son of the daughter of a prosperous factory owner and the son of the local baron.
familytreemaker.genealogy.com /users/h/u/t/E-Hutter   (252 words)

  
 The Secret of the Strength, Chapter 14
Jakob and other sincere seekers spoke against this, and within a year there were two Anabaptist congregations in Nikolsburg -- the large Schwertler group (those who carry swords) and the Kleinhäufler (those of the little heap).
Jörg Zaunring and Jakob Hutter came with refugees from the mountains of Austria.
Jakob Wideman fled with a small group to Austria where he was captured, tortured and put to death in Vienna by Roman Catholic authorities.
www.gw.org /Sos/Sos14.htm   (7788 words)

  
 Leiden - Search Results - MSN Encarta
Leiden University, government-financed institution of higher learning and research, the oldest in the Netherlands, founded in 1575 by William,...
Also characterized as Anabaptists were more radical Protestants, such as Jakob Hutter, a communalist and founder of the Hutterian Brethren, and...
Exclusively for MSN Encarta Premium Subscribers--quickly search thousands of articles from magazines such as Time, Newsweek, The Atlantic Monthly, and Smithsonian.
ca.encarta.msn.com /Leiden.html   (89 words)

  
 Today in History - February 25
Jakob Hutter was tortured, whipped and immersed in freezing water (to mock baptismal practices), then doused with brandy and burned.
King Ferdinand had ordered the persecution of all Anabaptists because of a few violent, millennialist revolutionaries in Munster, Germany, even though most Anabaptists were pacifists and renounced the Munsterite rebellion.
Born at Moos, South Tirol, Hutter was an itinerant hatmaker.
chi.lcms.org /history/tih0225.htm   (323 words)

  
 February 25: Hutter Doused with Brandy and Burned
February 25: Hutter Doused with Brandy and Burned
Jakob Hutter, a hatter with little education, became head of a band of Anabaptists and taught them to prosper by sharing in common what they owned.
Jakob Hutter and his wife Katherine Purst became hunted fugitives.
chi.gospelcom.net /DAILYF/2001/02/daily-02-25-2001.shtml   (601 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-20)
Simons preached that violence and warfare were contrary to the Scriptures, and taught his followers that violence must not be used in any attempt to establish a Kingdom of God.
Hutter sought to preserve Anabaptism by adopting many of the same changes to doctrine as the Simons had done.
The Hutterites, like the Mennonites, were composed of isolated communist settlements, seeking to purge violence from Anabaptism, eliminate interaction with the world, and “crucify the flesh” by eliminating secular adornments and practices.
pigseye.kennesaw.edu /~jgodfrey/anabaptists.doc   (1389 words)

  
 Bibliography of 16th Century Anabaptist Materials
"Jakob Hutter's Epistle Concerning the Schism in Moravia in 1533." Translated by the Society of Brothers and introduced by Robert Friedmann.
"Jakob Hutter's Last Epistle to the Church in Moravia, 1535." MQR 34 (1960): 37-47.
Guggisberg, Hans R. "Jakob Würben of Biel, a Thoughtful Admonisher Against Ludwig Hätzer and the Anabaptists." Translated by Elizabeth Bender.
www.goshen.edu /mqr/enganbib.html   (4857 words)

  
 Hutterite Bretheren - Godulike - An Irreverent Look at the Faith Industry
This was the very dark age of extreme Catholicism when certain priests were encouraged to indulge in all sorts of extremely painful torture and extremely inventive ways of executing people whose only crime was not strictly adhering, or in most cases simply not understanding, the commands of the Pope in far away Rome.
But Jakob Hutter was doing all the right things.
Being brutally tortured and suffering death at the heretic’s stake may have been a sad ending for Jakob but it was undoubtedly a great beginning for a new religious order.
www.godulike.co.uk /faiths.php?chapter=52&subject=who   (950 words)

  
 Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis - fedgazette - Color them plain but successful - January 2006   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-20)
Their simple life belies the fact that Hutterites are smart, efficient farmers, using the latest technology to keep up with the competition.
Named after their original leader, Jakob Hutter, Hutterites came to North America from Eastern Europe in the 1870s to escape religious persecution.
Hutterites first formed colonies in Europe in 1528 and, similar to the Amish, are an Anabaptist sect; that is, baptism is chosen by adults.
woodrow.mpls.frb.fed.us /pubs/fedgaz/06-01/hutterite.cfm   (2082 words)

  
 History Channel Search Results
Similar groups sprang up in southern Germany and also in Austria, where they were led by Jakob Hutter (fl.
The Swiss Brethren continued to suffer harassment and persecution into the 18th century, and many fled to the Rhineland and the Netherlands, others to America (Pennsylvania), and still others to eastern Europe.
Their very conservative dress and other customs—especially their use of shunning as a method of discipline—set them apart from the surrounding society.
www.historychannel.com /thcsearch/thc_resourcedetail.do?encyc_id=216237   (855 words)

  
 Jan 03 - Article - Missionary Spotlight - Gospel perspectives in Austria - Graham Haddow   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-20)
In about 1490 Jakob Hutter was born in Tyrol and became a leader among the Anabaptists.
However, in 1539 he was martyred, being burnt alive in Innsbruck on direct orders from Emperor Ferdinand I. It is recorded that Hutter’s successor, although frequently suffering imprisonment, baptised over 400 people.
Another prisoner, Jörg Meyer, when examined, confessed that he had been brought to enquire after the faith through the bravery in martyrdom of Jakob Hutter.
www.evangelical-times.org /Articles/Jan03/jan03a07.htm   (993 words)

  
 Gary Anderson Genealogy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-20)
Another movement came to be known as the Hutterian Brethren because of the coordinating leadership of Jakob Hutter, and this group was known for their communal living and for an intense missionary zeal that continued into the 17th century.
Similar groups sprang up in southern Germany and also in Austria, where they were led by Jakob Hutter and called Hutterites (Hutterian Brethren).
Their very conservative dress and other customs-especially their use of shunning as a method of discipline-set them apart from the surrounding society....
tidepool.st.usm.edu /genealogy/glossary.html   (2470 words)

  
 Utopia 1k
They got their name from their leader, Jakob Hutter who was an Anabaptist minister burned as heretic in Innsbruck 1536.
Like the Amish and Mennonites, the Hutterites are descended from the 16th-century Anabaptists, whose condemnation of infant baptism made them heretics.
These pacifists take their name from an early leader, Jacob Hutter.
www.tparents.org /Library/Unification/Publications/Utopia/utopia1k.htm   (900 words)

  
 Mennonites
Their very conservative dress and other customs - especially their use of shunning as a method of discipline - set them apart from the surrounding society.
All past mistakes are truly forgiven when believers offer prayer concerning their shortcomings and guilt; they have perfect standing "through the gracious forgiveness of God and through the blood of Jesus Christ."
In 1693 Jakob Ammann, a Swiss elder in Alsace, founded the most conservative wing of the Mennonites, the Amish.
mb-soft.com /believe/text/mennonit.htm   (2384 words)

  
 [No title]
Anabaptist biography Assignment : One can learn a great deal about the beliefs and character of Anabaptists by looking at one person closely.
You may choose any of the following Anabaptist figures: Menno Simons, Dirck Philips, Obbe Philips, Conrad Grebel, Michael Sattler, Balthasar Hubmaier, Jakob Hutter, Melchior Hoffman, Pilgram Marpeck, Hans Ries, Jacob Amman.
Or you may take a collective look at 5 Anabaptist women: martyrs, and/or wives of leaders from the same period (up to about 1700), e.g.
rosedale.edu /rsairs/ips.htm   (833 words)

  
 Mennonite Life - June 2005 - Ollenburger article
Menno, Dirk, and Marpeck were right to recognize that a peace church theology must be Christian theology, and their insistence on an apostolic and trinitarian understanding of the gospel was both right and exemplary.
Peter Riedemann: My third example of orthodox and Anabaptist trinitarian confession, after Menno and Marpeck, is Peter Riedemann, successor to Jakob Hutter as spiritual leader of the Hutterite community.
Riedemann's Hutterite Confession of Faith, first published between 1543 and 1545, is structured, in its first of three parts, around the Apostles Creed, of which it offers an exposition.
www.bethelks.edu /mennonitelife/2005Sept/ollenburger.php   (3997 words)

  
 ChurchRodent: Hutter, Jakob (died 1563)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-20)
There they founded a very long-lasting form of economic community called the Burderhof.
Consolidated under the leadership of Jakob Hutter these groups came to be known as "Hutterites."
Be sure to visit BlogRodent, my new weblog!
tatumweb.com /churchrodent/terms/hutter.htm   (64 words)

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