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On the Education of the Pre-Reformation Clergy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
No literary product of the humanistic period north of the Alps enjoyed a wider circulation or had a more lasting impact than satire. By far the best known of Erasmus's works today is In Praise of Folly, a satire that lays open and criticizes the foolishness of pre-Reformation society. Yet the prince of humanism had produced only a derivative of another satire, Sebastian Brant's Narrenschiff which also claimed a spot on the Western world's best-seller list for a few centuries. Sebastian Brant and Erasmus still are recognized as two of the severest critics of the society in which they lived, and their conception of pre-Reformation life set the trend for generations of historians to come. Erasmus's “Fool Stultitia continues, year after year, to climb her pulpit and deliver her oration to new audiences in every langauge…”
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- Copyright © American Society of Church History 1984
References
1. Moriae Encomium was written in 1509 when Erasmus was in his forties. It was first printed in Paris in 1511; revised, expurgated, and added-on editions appeared in quick succession. The book became so popular that no less than forty editions appeared in Erasmus's lifetime.
2. Sebastian Brant (1457–1521) was the son of a Strasbourg innkeeper. He studied law in Basel, attained the degree of Dr. Utriusque Juris (1489), and later became dean of the faculty of law. After he returned to Strasbourg, he worked as legal adviser for the city government and capped his career as Strasbourg's city chancellor. Narrenschiff was first published in 1494 in Basel and appeared in six revised and enlarged original editions during Brant's lifetime. The reprints and translations are countless.
3. Kaiser, Walter, Praisers of Folly (Cambridge, Mass., 1963), p. 20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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6. Moeller, , “Frömmigkeit in Deutschland um 1500,” p. 28Google Scholar. The number of clerics includes nuns, monks, friars, and secular priests of all kinds. It is also important to note that Worms was an imperial administrative center; it was not only the see of a bishop but also the seat of an imperial court.
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16. On 11 May 1524 the chapter of Saint Martin's in Heiligenstadt complained in a letter to the city council of Duderstadt about the “lutterische Predigen” of Johannes Brandenborch and demanded his removal. The city refused. Dean and Chapter in Heiligenstadt to Mayor and City Council in Duderstadt, 11 May 1524, Correspondence File 1500–1544, City Archives, Duderstadt.
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