Adam Tribbechov

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Adam Tribbechov

Adam Tribbechov , also Tribbechovius , Tribbecho , Tribbechow (born August 11, 1641 in Lübeck , † August 17, 1687 in Gotha ) was a German Evangelical Lutheran theologian and historian.

Life

Tribbechov was born as the son of Justus Tribbechov, a teacher at the Lübeck high school, and his wife Anna, daughter of the pastor at the Lübeck Petrikirche Adam Helms . First his father taught him, then he enjoyed lessons from private tutors and finally he attended the Katharineum in Lübeck . In 1659 he moved to the University of Rostock , where he had been matriculated since June 1654, returned home for a short time the following year and reached the University of Helmstedt via Magdeburg , the University of Wittenberg and the University of Leipzig in 1660 , where he worked in the house of Friedrich Ulrich Calixt and was given access to its library.

On April 23, 1662, when he returned to Rostock, he acquired the academic degree of master's degree and received a scholarship from Wismar's mayor Heinrich Schabbel . With Schabbel's brother-in-law David Gloxin , he went to Dankerode in 1662 as a tutor for his youngest son, Anton Heinrich . Various efforts to obtain office failed. Therefore, from May 8, 1662, he received further training in theology at the University of Gießen , namely with Johann Nikolaus Misler , Michael Siricius and Peter Haberkorn . At the same time he was already giving his first lectures.

In 1664 he was appointed associate professor of ethics at the newly founded University of Kiel and took over the full professorship of history from the late Michael Watson around Christmas time of the same year . In 1672 Duke Ernst von Sachsen Gotha appointed him to his church council; connected with it he became assessor at the Gotha Consistory . Then he settled in Kiel on 5 October of the same year under the Dean of the Faculty of Theology Christian Kortholt the doctor of theology doctorate. His new task included teaching the duke's children, participating in the visitations of churches and schools and participating in the promotion and training of candidates for church office. In addition, he developed a lively literary activity.

After taking over the general superintendent in Gotha on November 4, 1677, he visited Sachsen-Altenburg , which had fallen to Sachsen- Gotha , and the University of Jena . On July 27, 1680 he held the consecration speech in the Augustinian Church in Gotha, which was newly built by Andreas Rudolphi . Theologically, he participated in the settlement of the denominational dispute between Abraham Calov and Johannes Musäus and tried to find a balance between Protestants and Catholics.

Since 1684 Tribbechov had to struggle with health problems, as a result of which he died. On August 21, 1687, he was buried in the evening by torchlight and with the bells ringing three times in the Augustinian Church in Gotha.

family

Since August 10, 1675 he was married to Sophie, the daughter of the consistorial assessor in Friedenstein and court deacon in Gotha Abraham Gießbach, the widow of the Saxon land inspector Thomas von Aussen. This marriage resulted in nine children:

  • Anna Barbara Tribbechov (born June 24, 1676)
  • Johann Tribbechov (born October 4, 1677 - March 31, 1712)
  • Abraham Tribbechov (born August 16, 1679)
  • Sophia Tribbechov (born January 25, 1681)
  • Christina Tribbechov (January 28, 1682; † 1682)
  • Anna Sophia Tribbechov (* August 22, 1683; † 1683)
  • Friedrich Tribbechov (born December 17, 1684)
  • Maria Elisabeth Tribbechov (born April 23, 1686)
  • Dorothea Tribbechov (born April 22, 1687)

Fonts

  • De doctoribus scolasticis et corrupta per eos divinarum humanarumque rerum et scientia liber singularis . Giessen 1665, 1719
  • De philosophia morum inter barbaros praecipue orientales . 1666.
  • Exercitationes ad Baronii Annales, inde ab eo, quo Is. Casaubonus desiit, continuatae . 1667, 1708.
  • De Angelis .
  • De Mose Aegyptiorum Osiride .
  • Historia Chiliasmi . 1667.
  • Veritas Creationis Mundi prout a Mose descripta est ostensa in traditionibus gentium ac vetustissimas antiquitatis profanae momentis ad convincendis atheos . 1668.
  • Memoria Menonis Hannekenii . 1673.
  • Devotions on Eternal Life. From the joy mirror of eternal life Dr. Phil. Nicolai drawn . 1674.
  • The crucified love, that is: Devotional contemplation of a believing soul on the historia of the bitter suffering and death of Jesus Christ . Gotha 1676, Leipzig 1695, Gotha 1720.
  • Historia Naturalismi a prima sua origine ad nostra usque tempora per suas classes deducta . 1700.
  • Sommaria & porismata ad praxin vitae ducentis ad tinumquemque, Psalmorum Davidis annotara .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Entry in the Rostock matriculation portal
  2. Entry in the Rostock matriculation portal
  3. ^ Adam Tribbechow, in: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, Volume 38, 1894, pp. 595-598
  4. ibid.