Christian Nathusius

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Christian Nathusius (* 1664 in Leipzig ; † May 1689 ibid) was a German legal scholar.

Life

He was the seventh of ten children of the Leipzig Nikolaikantor Elias Nathusius and Maria Magdalena, geb. Rahn. He was baptized on November 28, 1664 in the Nikolaikirche . Nathusius attended the school in the Nikolaikirche, where his father also taught. From the winter semester of 1682, Nathusius studied at the University of Leipzig , where his father enrolled in 1674. On April 12, 1684 he was Baccalaureus Artium and on January 29, 1685 Magister. He was a member of the Wednesday Collegium Oratorium of Prof. publ. Lic. Schmidius . He died four years later at the age of 24 in his mother's apartment. He was buried on May 18, 1689 . Although he died young, he already gained fame as a writer and was included in Zedler's universal dictionary . One of his writings is also mentioned in the continuation of Christian Gottlieb Jöcher's general lexicon of scholars by Heinrich Wilhelm Rotermund .

Works

  • Quaestio mor. An sola praecepta negativa obligent semper et pro semper? together with Valentin Alberti, Fleischer, 1685
  • To expediat regi, eligere ministrissimum . Leipzig 1686
  • Quaestionem politicam: an expediat regi eligere ministrissimum? together with Samuel Großer, Fleischer, 1686
  • Super nobiliores superiori seculo res in Europe decennio primo gestas . Leipzig 1688
  • Mourning poem for Johann Gottlieb Höpner, Leipzig 1687

literature

  • Martin Nathusius: Nathusius, A journey of discovery through 450 years of family history (1548–1997) . Saint-Sulpice, VD, 1997

Individual evidence

  1. or December 8, 1664 according to the Gregorian calendar
  2. or on May 28, 1689 according to the Gregorian calendar
  3. "... made famous by some dissertations ... " Nathusius, Christian. In: Johann Heinrich Zedler : Large complete universal lexicon of all sciences and arts . Volume 23, Leipzig 1740, column 900.
  4. ^ Heinrich Wilhelm Rotermund: continuation and additions to Christian Gottlieb Jöcher's general scholarly lexicon in which writers of all classes are described according to their most distinguished living conditions and writings , p. 393
  5. Johann Gottlieb Höpner (1668–1687) was a baccalaureate. phil and stud. theol. and a college friend of Christian Nathusius
  6. ^ The funeral sermons of the Braunschweig City Archives , p. 1549