Heizo Buscher

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Heizo Buscher (also: Heizo Büscher and Heitzo Buscherus and name variants; * February 1, 1564 in Hanover ; † August 17 or 18, 1598 ibid) was a German Protestant clergyman , philosopher , mathematician and author .

Life

Heizo Buscher was a son of Vitus Buscher, who worked at the Marktkirche in Hanover, and was either brother or father of Stats Buscher .

Heizo Buscher first attended the municipal school in his hometown and then attended the grammar school in Braunschweig . He took up his studies in 1581 at the University of Helmstedt , moved to the University of Wittenberg in 1586 and acquired the academic degree of a master's degree in philosophy there in 1587 . In 1588 he worked for about a year as a private lecturer in philosophical sciences at the University of Helmstedt.

In 1589 Buscher was appointed vice rector of the Hanover school and rose to its rector in 1591. In the meantime he had married Gertrud Dorgut in June 1590, the daughter of the Helmstadt citizen Hermann Dorgut. The couple had two daughters and two sons.

In 1598 Heitzo Buscherus was appointed preacher of the Kreuzkirche . However, he could hardly carry out this office for 5 months, since he died of the plague on August 17 or probably 18 August 1598 at the age of only 34 .

Fonts (selection)

Buscher's writings deal mostly with logic . In addition, his “Arithmetica vulgaris” was so popular that Johannes Bothvidus , court preacher to King Gustav Adolf of Sweden, published special comments on it. As a co-author, Buscher was also in contact with numerous contemporary personalities.

The following works by Buscher have been preserved:

  • De ratione solvendi sophismata solide et perspicue ex P. Rami logica deducta et explicata ¬libri duo quibus docetur dialecticam P. Rami, ...; et praecipua Iohannis Piscatoris, atque aliorum quorundam, inusitatas propositiones tollentium et tropum in verbis coenae constituentium sophismata refellunter De ratione solvendi sophismata solide et perspicue ex P. Rami logica deducta et explicata , Lemgoviae: 1593; Digitized by the Bavarian State Library (BSB)
  • Fascicvlvs Qvaestionvm Controversarum, De Tropo in verbis Coenae, Proprietatibus essentialibus, Praedicationibus inusitatis: Ex Libris Svperioribvs Extractus, Et Novarum aliquot objectionum solutione auctus , VVitebergae: Andreae Hoffmanni, 1598; Digitized version of the BSB
  • Ethicae christianae de sancta sapientia et pietate vera, libri III , Lemgoviae [u. a.]: Holsterius, 1601

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b o. V .: Buscher, Heizo in the database of Niedersächsische Personen ( new entry required ) of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Library - Lower Saxony State Library [undated], last accessed on October 27, 2019
  2. a b c d e f g David Meier : M. Heitzo Buscherus , in ders .: M. David Meiers, Vormahls famous theologi, and preacher at the St. Georgen and Jacobi churches in Hanover, Kurtzgefaste message from the Christian Reformation In churches and schools in the old town of Hanover. How such the 14th day of Sept. 1533 ... come about there ... and how the Gospel afterwards ... was preached ... And with extensive remarks ... And with a preface introducing a small outline of the local school- History / accompanied by M. Johann Anton Strubberg . Now, along with a report from those Protestant preachers who have been a bit more adept at the St. Georgen, St. Aegidien and Creutz Church in the old town of Hanover, again brought to light Hanover: Nicolaus Förster and Son 1731, p. 91, especially p 247ff .; Digitized via Google books
  3. a b Information from the German National Library
  4. ^ A b c Hermann Wilhelm Bödeker : M. Heitzo Buscherus , in ders .: The Reformation of the old town of Hanover in 1533. A preparatory document for the third commemoration of our city's conversion to the Protestant church. In addition to lists of the Protestant church servants employed here , Hanover: Hahn'sche Hofbuchhandlung, 1833, p. 15; Digitized via Google books
  5. a b Buscher, Heizo in the German biography
  6. ^ Paul Zimmermann : Album Academiae Helmsttadiensis. Hannover, 1926, vol. 1, p. 32, no. 96
  7. ^ Album Academiae Vitebergensis from A. CH MDII usque ad A MDCII. Maximilian Niemeyer, Halle (Saale), 1894, p. 337, column a, line 11