Johann Lorenz von Mosheim

Johann Lorenz von Mosheim
Johann Lorenz von Mosheim

Johann Lorenz von Mosheim or Johann Lorenz Mosheim (October 9, 1693 – September 9, 1755), German Lutheran church historian, was born at Lübeck on 9 October 1693 or 1694.

Contents

Biography

After studying at the gymnasium of his native place, he entered the University of Kiel (1716), where he took his master's degree in 1718. In 1719 he became assessor in the philosophical faculty at Kiel.

His first appearance in the field of literature was in a polemical tract against John Toland, Vindiciae antiquae christianorum disciplinae (1720), which was soon followed by a volume of Observationes sacrae (1721). These works, along with the reputation he had acquired as a lecturer and preacher, secured for him a call to the University of Helmstedt as professor ordinarius in 1723. The Institutionum historiae ecclesiasticae libri IV appeared in 1726, and in the same year he was appointed by the duke of Brunswick abbot of Marienthal, to which dignity and emolument the abbacy of Michaelstein was added in the following year.

Mosheim was much consulted by the authorities when the new University of Göttingen was being formed, especially in the framing of the statutes of the theological faculty, and the provisions for making the theologians independent of the ecclesiastical courts. In 1747 he was made chancellor of the university. In 1748 he was responsible for the visit made by George II of Great Britain to his university. He died at Göttingen on September 9, 1755.

Works

Among his other works were De rebus christianorum ante Constantinum commentarii (1753), Ketzer-Geschichte (2nd ed. 1748), and Sittenlehre der heiligen Schrift (x7~553). His exegetical writings, characterized by learning and good sense, include Cogitationes in N. T. bc. select. (1726), and expositions of I Corinthians (1741) and the two Epistles to Timothy (1755). In his sermons (Heilige Reden) considerable eloquence is shown, and a mastery of style which justifies the position he held as president of the German Society.

There are two English versions of the Institutes, that of Archibald Maclaine, published in 1764, and that of James Murdock (1832), which is the more correct. Murdock's translation was revised and re-edited by James Seaton Reid in 1848, and by H. L. Hastings in 1892 (Boston), An English translation of the De rebus christianorum was published by Murdock in 1851.

See also

Mosheim is also credited with writing "An Ecclesiastical History, From The Birth of Christ to the Beginning of the Eighteenth Century: in which The Rise, Progress And Variation of Church Power Are Considered In Their Connection With the State Of Learning And Philosophy, and The Political History of Europe During that Period." It is a two volume set, translated from Latin by Archibald Maclaine, D.D., published in London in 1842 by William Tyler, Bolt-Court London. The title page lists the author as John Lawrence Mosheim, D.D., Chancellor of the University of Göttingen.

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Johann Lorenz von Mosheim — Johann Lorenz von Mosheim …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Mosheim, Johann Lorenz von — ▪ German theologian born Oct. 9, 1694, Lübeck died Sept. 9, 1755, Göttingen, Hanover       German Lutheran theologian who founded the pragmatic school of church historians, which insisted on objective, critical treatment of original sources. In… …   Universalium

  • Johann Heinrich Heubel — (* 25. Juli 1694 in Magdeburg; † 6. Dezember 1758 in Hamburg) war Jurist und Forscher für Literar und Religionsgeschichte in der Zeit der Frühaufklärung des 18. Jahrhunderts. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben 1.1 Jugend und Ausbildung 1.2 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Johann Matthias Gesner — Johann Matthias Gesner. Titelkupfer des Novus Linguæ Et Eruditionis Romanae Thesaurus (1747) Johann Matthias Gesner (* 9. April 1691 in Roth an der Rednitz; † 3. August 1761 in Göttingen) war ein Pädagoge, klassischer Philologe und Bibliothekar.… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Johann Matthias Schroeckh — Johann Matthias Schröckh, auch Schroeckh, (* 26. Juli 1733 in Wien; † 1. August 1808 in Wittenberg) war ein österreichischer Historiker und Literaturwissenschaftler. Leben Als Enkel des lutherischen Seniors Matthias Bel in Pressburg wollte er wie …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Johann Friedrich Löwen — (* 13. September 1727 in Clausthal; † 23. Dezember 1771 in Rostock) war ein deutscher Dichter, Intellektueller und Theatertheoretiker sowie ein zeitweiliger Vertrauter Gotthold Ephraim Lessings. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Biographie 2 Werk …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Mosheim, Tennessee — Location of Mosheim, Tennessee Coordinates …   Wikipedia

  • Mosheim — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Johann Lorenz von Mosheim (1693–1755), deutscher ev. Theologe Grete Mosheim (1905–1986), deutsche Schauspielerin Mosheim ist der Name folgender Orte: Mosheim (Malsfeld), Ortsteil der Gemeinde Malsfeld im… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Johann Daniel Overbeck — (* 23. Juni 1715 in Rethem; † 3. August 1802 in Lübeck) war ein evangelischer Theologe und Rektor des Katharineums. Inhaltsverzeichnis …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Johann Andreas Schmidt — (auch: Schmid, Schmidius, * 28. August 1652 in Worms; † 12. Juni 1726 in Helmstedt) war ein deutscher lutherischer Theologe und Kirchenhistoriker. In …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”