Conrad Vogt

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Conrad Vogt (born September 15, 1634 in Nienburg / Weser ; † May 15, 1691 in Königsberg (Prussia) ) was a German poet.

Life

Vogt attended high school in Bremen and studied at the University of Königsberg , where he wrote the dissertation philosophica, de felicitate practica, seu de summo hominis bono civili under Johann Deutsch . (Königsberg 1660) and on September 21, 1662 acquired the academic degree of Magister in Philosophical Sciences. In 1663 he became vice rector of the cathedral school in Königsberg and in 1665 vice rector there.

After he was promised an academic teaching position at the Königsberg University, he went on an educational trip that took him to Denmark, the Netherlands and England. After returning to Königsberg in 1669 he took over the professorship of practical philosophy and gave lectures on politics and ethics. In 1679 he became professor of poetry. He also took part in the organizational tasks of the Königsberg University and was rector of the Alma Mater in the summer semester of 1686 .

Vogt was married to Dorothea (* 1602, † September 15, 1683), daughter of the councilor in Löbenicht Friedrich Schnürlein and his wife Katharina Kroll.

Works

  • Disputatio politica de origine rerumpublicarum naturali, quarum prima imperium unius est. Koenigsberg 1669
  • Dissertatio politica de republica in genere. Koenigsberg 1671
  • Disputationum politicarum, prima de instrumentis & ornamentis felicitatis practicae, ex Lib. I. Eth. cap. 8. Koenigsberg 1672
  • Disputationum politicarum, secunda de instrumentis felicitatis practicae, ex Lib. I. Eth. 8. cap. Koenigsberg 1673
  • Disputationum politicarum, tertia & ultima. De ornamentis felicitatis practicae, ex Lib. I. Eth. cap. 8. Koenigsberg 1673
  • Disputatio politica de dispensatione. Koenigsberg 1677
  • Disputatio de poetis et poetica. Koenigsberg 1682
Works that appear in literature but could not be proven.
  • Disp. de origine rerumpublicarum naturali.
  • Instrumentis et ornamentis felicitatis practicae.

literature

  • Daniel Heinrich Arnoldt : Detailed and documented history of the Königsberg University. Johann Heinrich Hartung, Königsberg in Prussia, 1746, Part 2, pp. 390, 403
  • Georg Christoph Pisanski: Draft of a Prussian literary history in four books. Hartung Verlag, Königsberg, 1886, p. 260,
  • Christian Gottlieb Jöcher : General Scholar Lexicon, Darinne the scholars of all classes, both male and female, who lived from the beginning of the world to the present day, and made themselves known to the learned world, After their birth, life, remarkable stories, Withdrawals and writings from the most credible scribes are described in alphabetical order. Verlag Johann Friedrich Gleditsch, Leipzig, 1750, Vol. 4, 1698
  • J. Gallandi: Königsberg city families. In .: Rudolf Reinicke, Ernst Wichert: Old Prussian monthly new series. Ferdinand Beyer, Königsberg in Pr. 1883, p. 584

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