Gottlieb Aenetius
Gottlieb Aenetius actually: Theophilus Ænetius also: Löblich (born April 20, 1574 in Königsfeld (Saxony) , † September 15, 1631 in Jena ) was a German physicist.
Life
Gottlieb's parents were the then Königsfeld priest Jacob Aenetius and his wife Anna (Margaretha) Burs from Rochlitz. After his father's death, his mother moved back to Rochlitz , where he laid his educational foundations at the local school. At the beginning of June 1589 he continued his education at the grammar school in Halle (Saale) , which was under the direction of the rector Christoph Caesar . In 1591 he began training as a businessman with his relative Michael Burs in Vienna. After three years, he decided to move to the University of Leipzig in 1594 to study philosophical and theological sciences.
In Leipzig he acquired the bachelor's degree on June 28, 1596 and the academic degree of a master's degree in philosophy on January 26, 1598. After he had been active in the Leipzig school system for some time, he received the post of vice principal of the grammar school in Thorn in 1607 . In 1610 he moved back to Lützen , where he supported the family of his first wife. In the summer semester of 1615 he became an adjunct of the philosophical faculty of the University of Jena and was appointed professor of physics there in 1617. As a university lecturer at Salana, he also participated in the university's organizational tasks. He was dean of the philosophical faculty several times and in the summer semester of 1621 rector of the alma mater .
family
Aenetius was married twice.
His first marriage was on September 7, 1602 in Lützen with Justina Günther (* 1585 in Lützen; † October 18, 1605), the daughter of the city judge in Lützen Michael Günther (* October 4, 1546 in Lützen; † March 15, 1610 ibid.) and his wife Prisca Steinbach, married in 1572, the daughter of the mayor of Lützen Thomas Steinbach.
His second marriage was on June 25, 1623 in Jena with Maria Rinck (born around 1600 in Eisleben. January 4, 1648 in Jena) the daughter of the Eisleben councilor Philipp Rinck. The marriage has two sons and three daughters. The children are known to the son Johannes Baptist Aenetius (1624-1625), as well as the daughters Margarethe Aenetius († 1629), Maria Dorothea Aenetius and Justina Aenetius, who was married to Valerian Theodor Clement in her first marriage and her second marriage in 1638 to the Jena professor Gottfried Möbius received. His widow married on November 3, 1634 in Jena with Georg Pascasius (born October 6, 1613 in Sangerhausen, † December 18, 1667 in Jena).
Works (selection)
- Disp. XXII in Aristotelem de moribus. Hall 1604
- Kurtze and simple exhortation to humility. 1604
- Phililogia seu brevis de amicitia dissertatio. Eisleben 1606 (Resp.Samuel Bornhus, online )
- Theses De SS. Theologia et causis praecipuis, ad constitutionem illius concurrentibus de quibus. Thorn 1608 (Resp. Martin Wagner)
- Thesés de attributis, in definition dei assignatis, patri, filio, et spiritui sancto communibus. Thorn 1609 (Resp.Johann Waldsgott)
- Theses de unica unici dei essentia, et tribus distinctis. Thorn 1609 (Resp. Daniel Drosaeus)
- Theses Des scriptura, unica, illustri et perspicua, at que in fallibili religionis Christianae norma. Thorn 1609 (Resp.Johannes Paludinus)
- Oratio de S. Scripturae auctoritate et praecellentia. Thorn 1610
- Theses IX. Disputationis, ex parte Physicae generali. De Infinito, Quas Infiniti Entis auspiciis. Jena 1619 (Resp. Johann Christoph Hafner, online )
- Tetras conclusionum physicarum de primis elementorum qualitatibus. Jena 1620 (Resp.Peter Horn, online )
- Disputatio Physica De Mineralibus seu Corporibus Subterraneis. Jena 1620 (Resp.Johannes Agricola, online )
- Pentas Quaestionum Physicarum. Jena 1621 (Resp. Martin Rutilius, online )
- Problematum cosmologicorum decuria. Jena 1621 (Resp.Johann Georg Baldermann, online )
- Quadriga quaestionum philosophicarum. Jena 1621 (Resp.Johann Heinrich Vulpius, online )
- Quinque quaestione, thesibus expositae et propositae de anima rationali. Jena 1621 (Resp Johann Thimotheo Kirchner, online )
- Theses de modo propagationis animae humanae, et exacta omnium animarum, quo ad essentialem perfectionem et qualitate, de quibus adminiculante animarum conditore. Jena 1621 (Resp.Somon Goldammer, online )
- Theses Psychologicæ ... I. Num anima humana sit forma adsistens vel informans. II. Num formæ in homine sint plures. Jena 1622 (Resp. Georg Perlich)
- Exetasis Physica De Metallis. Jena 1622 (Resp.Caspar Sagittarius, online )
- Theses physicæ de sensibus internis. Jena 1623 (Resp.Johann Heinrich Vulpius)
- De meteoris in genere. 1628
- Theses tertiae disputationis meteorologicae, de cometis. 1628
- Theses octavae disputationis physicae, de causis per accidens. Jena 1631 (Resp.Tobias Schultetus, online )
literature
- Johann Caspar Zeumer, Christoph Weissenborn: Vitae Professorum Theologiae, Jurisprudentiae, Medicinae et Philosophiae qui in illustri Academia Jenensi, ab ipsius fundatione ad nostra usque tempora vixerunt et adhuc vivunt una cum scriptis a quolibet editis quatuor classibus. Johann Felici Bieleck, Jena, 1711, p. 64, (Philosophers, Online )
- Aenetius (Theophilus). In: Johann Heinrich Zedler : Large complete universal lexicon of all sciences and arts . Volume 1, Leipzig 1732, column 659.
- 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. 1, Sp. 122, ( online )
Individual evidence
- ↑ also: Löblich, Loblich, Enetius (* 1531 Rochlitz † 1579 Königsfeld), registered September 23, 1551 Uni. Wittenberg, February 22, 1552 Mag. Phil. ibid., 1553 Pastor Bensen in Bohemia, expelled in 1555, Rochlitz again, 1559 Rev. Königsfeld
- ↑ from their marriage there are 12 children, some of whom died young. Theophil I. Aenetius († young), Jacob Aenetius (* Rochlitz, enrolled in the summer semester of 1568 at the University of Leipzig), Joachim Aenetius (* Königsfeld, enrolled at the University of Wittenberg on September 11, 1577), Johann Aenetius (* Rochlitz, registered April 1579 Uni. Wittenberg), Elisabeth Aenetius (* around 1554 in Bensen; † Lausick) m. David Windreuter (also: Winterreuter, * Crottendorf am Fichtelberg; † 1624 (1625) Lausick / Saxony, 1578 FüS. Grimma, SS 1587 Uni. Leipzig, January 29, 1590 Mag. Phil. Ibid., 1592 ADiak. St. Kunigunden Rochlitz , 1604 Rev. Lausigk), Brigitte Aenetius (* 1555 in Bensen) m. with Magister Georg Hermann (* 1556 Colditz; † 1625 in Obergräfenhain, 1576 Uni. Leipzig, Mag. phil 1579 ibid., 1579 Pastor Königsfeld and February 28, 1593 Obergräfenhain), Sybilla Anetius married. around 1580 in Rochlitz with Michel Hermßdorf (cf. Reinhold Grünberg: Sächsisches Pfarrerbuch. Ernst Mauckisch, Freiberg / Sachsen, 1940, vol. 1, p. 542, Karl Gottlob Dietmann : The entire priesthood assigned to the unchanged Augustpurgic Konfeßion in the Electorate of Saxony and the incorporated lands. Sigismund Ehrenfried Richter, Dresden and Leipzig, 1754, vol. 3, p. 861; German gender book (DGB). vol. 63, p. 271, Matr. UL and UWB)
- ↑ Georg Erler: The younger register of the University of Leipzig 1559–1809 edited as a person and place register and supplemented with additions from the doctoral lists. 1559-1634. Verlag Giesecke & Devrient, Leipzig, 1909, p. 270
- ↑ Father city judge in Lützen Wolfgang Günther, 1568 civil rights Lützen, 1590 council chair (wine master), 1593 council treasurer, 1605 city judge, other well-known children: Anna Günther, Maria Günther, Margaretha Günther, Johann Günther, Wolfgang Günther, Michael Günther (cf. Christian Voccius : Christian funeral sermon / Bey the desire of the weyland Erbarn and Wolwise Mr. Michael Günther's former city judge to Lützen: held the 15th Martij, Anno 1610. Lamberg, Leipzig, 1610, online )
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Aenetius, Gottlieb |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Theophilus Ænetius, Theophil Löblich |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German physicist |
DATE OF BIRTH | April 20, 1574 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Königsfeld (Saxony) |
DATE OF DEATH | September 15, 1631 |
Place of death | Jena |