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Topic: Johann Brenz


  
  - Price - Germany data
In 1796, Johannes Preiss, resident and master smith of Gadernheim, died on the 11th of August and was buried on the 13th.
Johann Peter, the illegitimate son of Anna Margaretha, heir and legitimate daughter of the deceased Johannes Preiss, former resident and master smith, was born on 10 March at 10 in the morning and was baptized on the 11th (of March).
In 1801, Johann Georg, son of Christian Preiss, resident and master smith of Gadernheim, a small son, died on the 16th of April and was buried on the 19th.
mysite.verizon.net /bowers.clan/id10.html   (3462 words)

  
 Johann Brenz - LoveToKnow 1911   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
JOHANN BRENZ (1499-1570), Lutheran divine, eldest son of Martin Brenz, was born at Weil, Wurttemberg, on the 24th of June 1499.
In 1514 he entered the university of Heidelberg, where Oecolampadius was one of his teachers, and where in 1518 he heard Luther discuss.
He was twice married, and his eldest son, Johann Brenz, was appointed (1562) professor of theology in Tubingen at the early age of twenty-two.
11.1911encyclopedia.org /B/BR/BRENZ_JOHANN.htm   (305 words)

  
 pricegermany
Matthaeus Preiss was born in 1653 in Brenz an der Brenz, Germany, to Hans and Christina (Kastler) Preyss.
Johannes Preiss was born March 18, 1725, in Erbach, Germany, to Hans Wilhelm and Maria Louysa (Spiess) Preiss.
Their relationship to Johannes is documented in the record of the illegitimate birth of Anna Margaretha’s son Johann Peter on March 10, 1798, on page 208.
www.geocities.com /Heartland/Village/3272/pricegermany.html   (4414 words)

  
 Council of Trent
He secured, during the council's second period, 1551-52, an invitation, twice given, to the Protestants to be present, and the council issued a letter of safe-conduct (thirteenth session) and offered them the right of discussion, but denied them a vote.
Melanchthon and Johann Brenz[?], with some other German Lutherans, actually started in 1552 on the journey to Trent.
Brenz offered a confession, and Melanchthon, who got no farther than Nuremberg, took with him the irenic statement known as the Confessio Saxonica.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/co/Council_of_Trent.html   (1666 words)

  
 Ancestors of Stanford P Seyb   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
She was married to Johann Jost NEUSS on 5 Dec 1725 in Kindenheim, Germany.
Johann Christoffel HANAUER was born in 1674 in Kindenheim, Germany.
Johann Friedrich HANAUER was born in 1708 in Kindenheim, Germany.
home.earthlink.net /~diaphany/d15.htm   (1314 words)

  
 JewishEncyclopedia.com - BRENZ, SAMUEL FRIEDRICH:   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
For the use of Christians as well as Jews he had it printed in German and in Hebrew, and the work was successful in refuting the false accusations of Brenz.
A new edition of the "Theriak" appeared at Altorf in 1680, and a Latin translation by Johann Wülfer, together with the Schlangenbalg, was published at Nuremberg in 1681.
Wülfer strongly defended the Jews against Brenz, whose crass ignorance, hatred, falsehood, and pernicious fanaticism, as well as his plagiarism of Pfefferkorn, he exposed.
www.jewishencyclopedia.com /view.jsp?artid=1445&letter=B   (220 words)

  
 Hell (in Christianity) - Encyclopedia of Religion   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Some were of opinion that hell is everywhere, that the damned are at liberty to roam about in the entire universe, but that they carry their punishment with them.
The adherents of this doctrine were called Ubiquists, or Ubiquitarians; among them were, e.g., Johann Brenz, a Swabian, a Protestant theologian of the sixteenth century.
However, that opinion is universally and deservedly rejected; for it is more in keeping with their state of punishment that the damned be limited in their movements and confined to a definite place.
www.religion-encyclopedia.com /H/hell_in_christianity.htm   (964 words)

  
 Origins And Family Ties   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Johannes Knöllinger and his wife, Johanne Barbara Dieterich, lived in Scharnhausen/über Esslingen (Neckar), Germany in 1839.
Johanne Barbara Dieterich and her husband, Johannes Knöllinger, lived in Scharnhausen/über Esslingen (Neckar), Germany in 1839.
Johanne Katharine Dieterich and her husband, Johann Georg Maier, lived in Scharnhausen/über Esslingen (Neckar), Germany in 1863.
hometown.aol.com /jthomasl/orilaven.htm   (5118 words)

  
 The Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod - Christian Cyclopedia
Brenz was Luther's most reliable friend in S Ger.
Hermelink, “Johannes Brenz als lutherischer und als schwäbischer Theologe,” in Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirchenzeitung, III (August 31, 1949), 242–246; W.
Hartmann, Johannes Brenz, in Leben und ausgewählte Schriften der Väter und Begründer der lutherischen Kirche, ed.
www.lcms.org /ca/www/cyclopedia/02/display.asp?t1=B&word=BRENZ.JOHANN   (373 words)

  
 Descendants of Johann Martin Baumbach
Johann Martin and Magdelena Bohnenberger Baumbach Sr were residents of Langenbrand, Neüemberg, Germany.
Johann was a school teacher at a boy's school.
BAUMBACH, Johann Martin, Jr and Barbara Fischer of Unterreichenbach and Giengen an der Brenz, Germany.
www.mindspring.com /~baumbach/baumbach   (191 words)

  
 Price
Johann Christian Preiss was born Aug. 17, 1764 in Gadernheim, Germany, to Johannes and Maria Magdalena (Braun) Preiss.
(3) Anna Margarethe was born Dec. 28, 1777 in Gadernheim to Johann Nikolaus and Anna Margaretha (Wiener) Ripper.
Johann Nikolaus Preiss was born July 7, 1805 in Gadernheim, Germany, to Johann Christian and Anna Margaretha (Ripper) Preiss.
mysite.verizon.net /bowers.clan/id5.html   (9398 words)

  
 BRENZ, JOHANN (1499–1570) - Online Information article about BRENZ, JOHANN (1499–1570)
BRENZ, JOHANN (1499–1570), Lutheran divine, eldest son of See also:
He was twice married, and his eldest son, Johann Brenz, was appointed (1562) See also:
Hartmann and J5ger, Johann Brenz (184o–1842) ; Bossert, in Hauck's Realencyklop.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /BOS_BRI/BRENZ_JOHANN_14991570_.html   (482 words)

  
 "B" Famous People
Bachofen, Johann Jakob (1815-87) Jurist, anthropologist, and historian, born in Basel, N Switzerland.
Bader, Johannes (c.1487-c.1544) Theologian, born in Landau in der Pfalz, Germany.
Bernoulli, Johann or Jean (1667-1748) Mathematician, born in Basel, N Switzerland...
www.jonathanselby.com /Bfam   (17711 words)

  
 Karg, Georg (1512-1576)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
In 1557 he participated at the theologians' disputation at Worms (11 September- 7 October).
Here he signed with Johann Brenz, Johann Marbach, Michael Diller, Johann Pistorius, Jakob Andreae, and Jakob Rungius an opinion drawn up by Melanchthon at the request of the elector Palatine Ottheinrich (Corpus Reformatorum IX 1842, col. 521, No. 6501) for the suppression of the Anabaptists (see Diller, Michael).
It was printed at Worms in 1557 under the title, Prozess, wie es soll  gehalten werden mit den Wiedertäufern, by Paulus and Philip Köpflein.
www.gameo.org /encyclopedia/contents/K3751.html   (203 words)

  
 Heresies: the image of Christ in the mirror of heresy and orthodoxy from the apostles to the present. (book reviews) - ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
AN ALLY OF Luther's named johann Brenz computed the distance from earth to heaven to be 16,338,562 German miles.
Harold O. Brown tells us: "Given the speed of Jesus' ascent from the Mount of Olives, as Brenz estimated it, Brenz concluded that the body of Jesus could not yet have reached heaven by the sixteenth century." Thus did Brenz refute Zwingli's insistence that Christ is literally at the right hand of God.
Hilaire Belloc constantly pointed out that during the early centuries of Christianity, men referred not to "Christianity" but to the Church, to be a Christian was to be a member of which.
www.highbeam.com /library/docfree.asp?DOCID=1G1:3465625&ctrlInfo=Round18:Mode18c:DocG:Result&ao=   (957 words)

  
 An Early Protestant Bible Containing The Third Book Of Maccabees: With A List Of Editions And Translations Of Third ...
Both the Leipzig and the Tübingen editions open with a Proœmium written by Johannes Brenz.
In this foreword the authority of the Scripture is supported by such arguments as: the Apostles could not lie or speak in jest; they were eyewitnesses, and could have always been contradicted by contemporaries; they bore testimony to their teaching by their blood.
There is no complete edition of Brenz's productions, though selected works in eight large folio volumes were published at Tübingen in 1576-1590.
www.islamic-awareness.org /Bible/Text/Canon/protmetzger.html   (2612 words)

  
 AC Milan Sign Vogel || Unofficial European Football - Unofficial European Football News and Views   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
PSV revealed today, on their official website, that Swiss midfielder Johann Vogel will play for AC Milan next season.
Vogel was expected to sign for either Lazio Roma or Villarreal and his transfer to Milan comes as a complete shock.
Johann Vogel's current deal with PSV will expire June 1st, so no transfer fee will be involved.
www.sportnetwork.net /main/s342/st73897.htm   (203 words)

  
 Today in History - January 4   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
1547 Johann Brenz returned to Halle after being forced to flee several weeks earlier during the Smalkaldic War.
He was so highly esteemed that Oliver Cromwell gave him a state funeral and had him buried in Westminster Abbey.
One of earliest pioneers in textual (lower) criticism, his two-volume critical edition of the Greek New Testament (1775-1777) laid the foundation for all later scholarly work on the original Greek text.
chi.lcms.org /history/tih0104.htm   (900 words)

  
 Witchcraft Articles by Rolf Schulte -- Jan van der Crabben
The town’s physician and scholar, Johann Ewich, warned against overestimating crimes of witchcraft in 1583 in his book, De sagarum (Concerning Witches; republished in 1586 as Theatrum de veneficis [Theater of Poisoners]) Ewich was a friend of Johann Weyer, the great German sceptic of witch hunting.
In 1603, the highest church dignitary of Bremen, Archbishop Johann Friedrich, rejected the water test as legal proof and doubted the existence of the witches’ Sabbat.
Meder exemplified the providentialist tradition within Lutheranism stemming from the Württemberg school of Johann Brenz, which saw the growth of witchcraft s a kind of godly providence (Midelfort 1972, 36-65).
www.jan.vandercrabben.name /translations_schulte.php   (2408 words)

  
 The Ambiguous Relationship of Luther & the Early Protestants to St. Augustine   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
459, states that "The letter was written by Melanchthon to Johann Brenz, but it had the entire approval of Luther, who even appended a few words to it.
Melanchthon had written to Brenz on April 8, saying that he understood why Brenz, a newly married man, hadn’t written, but asking him to start corresponding again.
Brenz must have commented on them in a letter not found in the collection of Melanchthon’s correspondence.
ic.net /~erasmus/RAZ260.HTM   (5849 words)

  
 Family of Frederick Johann Baumbach
Henriette Baumbach was not recorded in the Johann Frederick Baumbach Family Bible.
LOUISA1 MEYER was born 1848 in DEU, and died Aft.
Anna's birth was not recorded in the Johann Frederick Baumbach Family Bible, and she was born two months after the marriage of Louise Meyer Remeisen to Frederick Baumbach.
www.mindspring.com /~baumbach/baumbach/fredfam.htm   (2358 words)

  
 HaffnersEurope - pafg81 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
Anna Maria Hafner was born on 5 Dec 1818 in Neustadt, Neckarkreis, Wuerttemberg.
Anna Maria Haffner was christened on 30 Oct 1611 in Heidenheim, Brenz, Jagstkreis, Wuerttemberg.
Anna Maria Hafner was born on 13 May 1801 in Neustadt, Neckarkreis, Wuerttemberg.
haffnerfamilytree.com /HFT/Europe/pafg81.htm   (174 words)

  
 Chronology of the Medieval and Reformation Church   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Johannes Reuchlin († 1522), German humanist and Hebrew scholar and great uncle to Philip Melanchthon.
 Luther, Melanchthon, Justus Jonas, Johann Brenz take the as yet unpublished Schwabach Articles to the Marburg Colloquy (1-3 October) to meet with Zwingli, Oecolampius, Bucer and Heidio.
1586 Johann VI converts the five Counts of the Wetterau, whose lands are included in the Herborn Synod.
public.csusm.edu /public/guests/rsclark/refchron.html   (5959 words)

  
 LM
Martin Bucer, who had worked on various German church orders, was brought to Cologne by Hermann in Feb. 1542.
Bucer began work on a church order based largely on the 1533 Brandenburg-Nuremberg Order of Andreas Osiander and Johann Brenz.
Philipp Melancthon, brought to Cologne in May 1543, revised and enlarged the doctrinal portion.
www.episcopalchurch.org /19625_12702_ENG_HTM.htm   (245 words)

  
 Charlie Jensen's Manuscript Collection - 16th Century Leaves
Two leaves from a renaissance era printing of "The Sphere of Scrobosco" (De Spharea) by Johannes de Scrobosco.
Fine large folio German reformation imprint from Brenz, Johann, Inscriptum Apostoli et Evangelistae...Commentarius (Commentary upon the Writings of the Apostles and the Evangelists), printed by Ulrich Morhard at Tubingen, Germany in 1547.
An early edition of the Scriptural Commentary of the Protestant Reformer Johann Brenz (1499 - 1570).
www.chazj.com /ms16thorder.php   (3074 words)

  
 The Heidelberg Disputation: Introduction
Volta, in turn, delegated this responsibility to Johann von Staupitz, vicar of the German congregation of Augustinians.
Staupitz, however, holding Luther in high regard (he was Luther's best friend and spiritual father, though their friendship would wane, Staupitz holding fast to the unity of the Catholic Church), instead invited him to speak at the Heidelberg gathering to present his new Wittenberg evangelical theology to the Augustinian brothers.
Although older theologians remained unmoved by Luther's Heidelberg Disputation, it impressed a number of young theologians including Martin Bucer, Johann Brenz, and Theobald Billikan, men who would later spread the reformation throughout the German states.
www.catchpenny.org /crux.html   (4024 words)

  
 Cor ad cor loquitur   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
I quote Augustine as in entire agreement, although he does not sufficiently explain the righteousness of faith; this I do because of public opinion concerning him.
The letter was written by Melanchthon to Johann Brenz, but it had the entire approval of Luther, who even appended a few words to it.
Janssen, Johannes, History of the German People From the Close of the Middle Ages, 16 volumess, translated by A.M. Christie, St. Louis: B. Herder, 1910 (orig.
socrates58.blogspot.com /2004/07/early-protestantism-decline-of.html   (1763 words)

  
 FRC: Messenger Archive
Canon 848 of the Codex iuris canonici stipulates: “The priest has the right and the duty publicly to bring the communion to all the sick within his parish, also to those who are not his parishioners.”
Even though Luther rejected the “communion of the sick,” it was maintained in the Lutheran churches, particularly under the influence of Philip Melanchton (1497-1560) and Johann Brenz (1499-1570).
From the very beginning, the churches of the Calvinistic reformation had a difference of opinion with respect to the question whether the “communion of the sick” was permissible.
www.frcna.org /Messenger/archive.asp?Issue=200409&Article=1099430750   (1829 words)

  
 Early Printed Leaf Catalog: the 16th century and later
Condition is a nice fine, with perhaps a trifle of faint margin damping.
Henry VII urged the author, Virgil Polydore, a Briton of Italian descent, to publish this monumental history of the island kingdom.
TEXT LEAF from Brenz, Johann, Inscriptum Apostoli et Evangelistae...Commentarius (Commentary upon the Writings of the Apostles and the Evangelists), printed by Ulrich Morhard at Tubingen, Germany in 1547.
www.historicpages.com /texts/lfcat29.htm   (4869 words)

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