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Topic: Johannes Dantiscus


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  Johannes Dantiscus
Johannes Dantiscus or Johann(es) von Hoefen or (Johann(es)Flachsbinder) also known as Jan Dantyszek for his birthplace, was born in the Polish city of Gdansk in 1485.
Johannes became a church canon and a poet.
Von Hoefen or Dantiscus took part in the imperial convention of Vienna in 1515 under Maximilian I. Among his many works is the "Life of Johann von Hoefen" (Vita Joannis de Curiis Dantisci).
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/jo/Joannes_Dantiscus.html   (112 words)

  
 Johannes Dantiscus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Johannes Dantiscus, also Johann(es) von Höfen or Johann(es) Flachsbinder, Polish: Jan Dantyszek (Dantyszek Coat of Arms), was born 1 October 1485 in Danzig (Gdańsk) and died 27 October 1548 in Lidzbark Warmiński (Heilsberg) and is known as a Father of Polish Diplomacy.
Dantiscus, at King Sigismund I's side, took part in the Holy Roman Empire's convention of Vienna in 1515.
Dantiscus belongs to the circle of the most outstanding poets.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Johannes_Dantiscus   (288 words)

  
 Johannes Dantiscus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Johannes Dantiscus, or Johann(es) von Hoefen, or Johann(es) Flachsbinder, also known as Jan Dantyszek, was born in Poland in the Polish city of Gdańsk (Danzig) in 1485.
Johannes took on the nickname Dantiscus in order to show that he was a burgher of Gdańsk (Latin: Dantiscum).
Dantiscus, at King Sigismund I of Poland's side, took part in the imperial convention of Vienna in 1515.
www.godseye.com /stat/en/j/o/h/Johannes_Dantiscus_44da.html   (317 words)

  
 Culm
The most celebrated schools of the diocese were the "Johannes" school at Thorn and the cathedral school at Culm; the latter was changed in 1473 into a studium particulare and had celebrated professors, among whom were Johannes Dantiscus, Eobanus Hessus, etc.
The heresies of Hus and Wyclif found many adherents in the Diocese of Culm in the fifteenth century, and thus the ground was prepared for the religious revolution of the sixteenth.
The zealous and spiritual-minded Johann V von Höfen, generally called Dantiscus (1530-38), laboured to maintain the Catholic Faith, as did also Tiedemann Giese (1538-49), the friend of Copernicus, and Stanislaus Hosius (1549-51), who, after an episcopate of two years, was transferred to the See of Ermland.
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/c/culm.html   (1493 words)

  
 Johannes Dantiscus: Definition and Links by Encyclopedian.com
...Johannes Dantiscus Johannes Dantiscus Johannes Dantiscus or Johann(es) von...Flachsbinder.
He became bishop of Chelmno in...the surrounding Prussian lands turning Protestant, Warmia remained Catholic.
Post a link to definition / meaning of " Johannes Dantiscus " on your site.
www.encyclopedian.com /jo/Johann-Danticus.html   (220 words)

  
 Johannes_Dantiscus   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Johannes Dantiscus - also Johann, es, von Höfen or Johann, es, Flachsbinder - Polish: Jan Dantyszek, Dantyszek Coat 0f Arms, - was born 1 October 1485 inside Danzig, Gdańsk, & died 27 October 1548 inside Lidzbark Warmiński, Heilsberg, & is known as a Father 0f Polish Diplomacy.
Johannes took on teh nickname Dantiscus inside order to show that he was a burgher 0f Danzig, Latin: Dantiscum, where his father was a brewer & merchant.
Johannes became a church canon & a poet.
www.demandtwinother.info /Johannes_Dantiscus   (680 words)

  
 Olivier THILL. Book review. The Life of Copernicus.
Besides, on 7 May 1543, Gaspar Hoge, provost of the parish church in Frauenburg, as attorney of Johannes Loitsch, asked the chapter to grant him canonship and prebend on the basis of a papal letter.
On 21 May 1543, the chapter allowed the coadjutor, Johannes Loitsch, to replace Copernicus as a canon, as if he was already dead on May 21 (see the biography of Jürgen Hamel).
Therefore I believe it was somebody else who took care of the children, either the semi-brother of Copernicus' mother, uncle Johann Peckaw, or the husband of the sister of Copernicus' mother, the mayor of Torun, uncle Tileman von Allen.
members.aol.com /OlivThill/private/copernic.htm   (2469 words)

  
 [No title]
From the beginning of the sixteenth century the Catholic humanist, Vida, had been engaged among other works on the composition of odes, elegies, and hymns: he belonged to the poetae urbani of the Medici period of Leo X, many of whom wrote lyrical, in addition to their epical, pieces.
Johannes Dantiscus, who died in 1548 as Bishop of Ermland, composed thirty religious hymns after the fashion of the older ones in the Breviary, without any trace of classical imitation.
Among the Humanists of France, John Salmon (Salmonius Macrinus) was named the French Horace, and among the numerous other names those of Erixius with his "Carmina" (1519) and Theodore de Bèze with his "Poemata" (1548) deserve special mention.
www.ewtn.com /library/HOMELIBR/09026A.TXT   (5846 words)

  
 OBTA - Pracownia Dantyszka
Their contacts with Dantiscus are of great importance for the research on European Humanism.
The last one will collect the correspondence between Dantiscus and a few persons, whose letters are not as numerous as to be published in separate volumes.
Also, we plan to publish a volume of Dantiscus’ selected correspondence in German or tranlsated into German; this volume is preliminary entitled Correspondence of Johannes Dantiscus (1485-1548) as a source for the research on the Baltic region’s élites: the Habsburg’s countries, Prussia, Scandinavia.
www.obta.uw.edu.pl /obta/dantyszek/programang.html   (691 words)

  
 The Galileo Project
Since higher clerical positions could only be filled by those who had studied at a foreign university for three years and taken a doctorate (according to the decree of Johannes Dantiscus, Bishop of Warmia), Suchten went to Louvain, where he studied medicine, then to Rome, Ferrara, Bologna, and Padua.
He then went to the court of the German magnate Johann von Seebach in Bavaria, where he appears to have ended his life.
Suchten spent the last years of his life at the court of the German magnate Johann von Seebach in Bavaria.
galileo.rice.edu /Catalog/NewFiles/suchten.html   (822 words)

  
 1485 - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
June 24 - Johannes Bugenhagen, German religious reformer (died 1558)
December 16 - Catherine of Aragon, queen of Henry VIII of England (died 1536)
Johannes Dantiscus, Polish poet and bishop (died 1548)
www.arikah.net /encyclopedia/1485   (396 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Latin Literature in Christianity (Sixth To Twentieth Century)
Into the same category falls a comedy by Bebel, demonstrating the superiority of humanistic culture over medieval learning.
Among the Humanists of France, John Salmon (Salmonius Macrinus) was named the French Horace, and among the numerous other names those of Erixius with his "Carmina" (1519) and Théodore de Bèze with his "Poemata" (1548) deserve special mention.
From Holland Latin poetry found an entrance also into the Northern Empire under the patronage of Queen Christina, while even Iceland had its representative in the Protestant Bishop Sveinsson (1605-74), who among other works published a rich collection of poems to the Blessed Virgin in the most varied ancient classical metres.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/09026a.htm   (5869 words)

  
 1548 - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
September 7 - Catherine Parr, queen of King Henry VIII of England
Johannes Dantiscus, Polish poet and Bishop of Warmia (born 1485)
Juan Diego Cuauhtlatoatzin, Mexican Catholic saint (born 1474)
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/1548   (316 words)

  
 The Galileo Project
Rheticus's other major patron in Poland was Johannes von Werden, the mayor of Danzig, whom he visited while publishing the Narratio.
In the Ermland church, two possible patrons are the canon of Ermland, Georg Donner, to whom Rheticus had dedicated a copy of Coprnicus, and the bishop of Ermland, Johannes Dantiscus.
Some representative examples are: Johannes Schoener, Achilles Gasser, Georg Hartmann, and Paul Fabricius.
galileo.rice.edu /Catalog/NewFiles/rheticus.html   (1286 words)

  
 DANTISGUS, Johannes (eigentlich: Johannes Flachsbinder; auch: Johannes von Höfen, Jan Dantyszek)
DANTISGUS, Johannes (eigentlich: Johannes Flachsbinder; auch: Johannes von Höfen, Jan Dantyszek)
DANTISGUS, Johannes (eigentlich: Johannes Flachsbinder; auch: Johannes von Höfen, Jan Dantyszek), Humanist und Politiker, Bischof von Ermland, * 31.10.
Johannes Gottlob Boehmius, Breslau 1764; Analecta carmina, hrsg.
www.bautz.de /bbkl/d/danticus_j.shtml   (509 words)

  
 de_revolutionibus_orbium_coelestium   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Rather, the word hypothesis should be understood as a convenient bit of mathematics not necessarily related at all to reality.
The foreword was generally regarded as Copernicus' own idea, until Johannes Kepler showed that it was an addition by the Lutheran philosopher Osiander.
In his system Copernicus argued that the universe is made up of eight spheres.
www.chatpartners.net /wiki/?title=De_Revolutionibus_Orbium_Coelestium   (1425 words)

  
 Nicolaus Copernicus...SciPeeps.com
The system nevertheless had a large influence on scientists such as Galileo, Tycho Brahe, and Johannes Kepler, who adopted, championed and (especially in Kepler's case) improved the model.
Copernicus seems to have been benefited from the attitude of the bishops who were his superiors in the church - Johann Dantiscus and Tiedmann Giese.
Both preferred, at least initially, to promote tolerance of differing views within the church rather than open discord, and both encouraged Copernicus' publication of his scientific beliefs.
scipeeps.com /nicolauscopernicus.html   (2491 words)

  
 Jerzy Axer   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The effect of Polish-Spanish co-operation introduced into the international agreement has assumed the form of the volume: Españoles y polacos en la corte de Carlos V (ed.
The most important achievement of the project is the first volume of publication supported by PAU: Ioannes Dantiscus’ L
‘Johannes Dantiscus and Hernan Cortes’ (with R. Tomicki), in Joannes Dantiscus 1485-1548.
www.colbud.hu /mult_ant/Thyssen-Participants/JerzyAxer.htm   (1917 words)

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