Hieronymus Dathe

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Hieronymus Dathe

Hieronymus Dathe (born February 4, 1667 in Hamburg , † June 14, 1707 in Annaberg ) was a German Lutheran theologian.

Life

The son of the merchant and senior citizen at St. Catherine's Church, Andreas Dathe, and his wife Magaretha received his baptism on February 6th in the St. Catherine's Church . He received his training from private teachers at an early age, attended the Hamburg School of the Johanneum and in 1684 the local grammar school. In 1685 he moved to the Katharineum in Lübeck , which was then under the direction of Abraham Hinckelmann . In the course of his training he had acquired the basics of studying, so that on April 28, 1687 he was able to go to the University of Giessen with the premise of completing a theological course.

Here were initially Balthasar Mentzer in mathematics, David Clodius in philology, Heinrich Phasian (1633–1697) in rhetoric, poetry and history, Bernhard Ludwig Mollenbeck (1658–1720) in ethics, Philipp Kasimir Schlosser (1658–1712) in logic and metaphysics and Michael Bernhard Valentini (1657–1729) in physics, his first academic teacher of the seven liberal arts . Guided by these teachers, he earned a master's degree in philosophical sciences. He also attended lectures at the theological faculty with Philipp Ludwig Hanneken and Kilian Rudrauf (1627–1690). At the beginning of 1690 he returned to Hamburg at the request of his parents. Here he had also given two sermons at the Katharinenkirche and fell ill. However, it was his wish to pursue his university career further.

After recovering from a brief illness, he went to the University of Wittenberg on May 31, 1690 , where he was admitted to the house of Michael Walther the Younger . He attended his lectures as well as those of Caspar Löscher and Johann Georg Neumann . After Walter's death he was accepted into Christian Röhrensee's house , who encouraged him to take part in the Wittenberg university business. On November 11, 1692 he became an adjunct at the philosophical faculty and gave lectures on theological topics. In 1694 he was appointed provost and superintendent of Kemberg . He received his doctorate on July 24, 1694 as a licentiate and on July 26 of the same year with the work de consensu oribo doxorum orthodoxo in loco Christo as a doctor of theology. After working in Kemberg for eight years, he was transferred to Annaberg as superintendent, where he died of asthma at the age of forty.

family

Dathe was married twice.

His first marriage was on September 25, 1694 in Wittenberg with Johanna Maria (born November 26, 1673 in Wittenberg, † October 17, 1695 in Kemberg), the daughter of the Wittenberg mathematics professor Michael Strauch . The daughter Johanna Magaretha Dathe (born July 16, 1695 in Kemberg; † August 14, 1697 ibid) comes from this marriage.

His second marriage was on September 15, 1696 in Döbeln with Johanna Elisabeth, the daughter of the town clerk, legal consultant and syndic in Döbeln Johann Georg Haußner. There are four sons and four daughters from this marriage. The following are known: S. Andreas (baptized August 22, 1697 in Kemberg; † 1718 in Leipzig, student of medicine); T. Johanna Elisabeth (baptized April 23, 1699 in Kemberg; † June 16, 1699 ibid); S. Johann Hieronymus von Dathe Councilor in Weißenfels and Provost in Wurzen, 1745 nobility (born January 6, 1702 in Kemberg; † April 28, 1762 in Wurzen); S Gottlob Liborius Dathe (born July 16, 1703 in Annaberg) was first preacher on the mount in Annaberg, became a doctor; T Johanna Elisabeth (baptized December 3, 1702 in Kemberg) married. 1720 with assessor of the law faculty in Leipzig Dr. Christoph Dondorff († November 19, 1737)

Works

  • Oratio de patientia Cbristi, rectore Enocbo Svantenio habita. Lübeck 1687
  • Disp. de terrae immobilitate, praeside Balth. Menzero. Casting 1689
  • Disp. de Sacramento baptismi, praeside D. Ph. Ludov. Hannekenio. Casting 1669
  • Disp. de peccato, praeside D. Kiliano Rudraufio. Casting 1689
  • Oratio de statu tristissimo devastati Palatinatus. Casting 1689
  • Positiones XIII. miscellaneae ex humanitate poetica, praeside Job. Ge. Neumanno propositae. Wittenberg 1690
  • Dissertationes de geniis veterum. Wittenberg 1692
  • Disp. de liberarum Imperii civitatum potestate, majestatis aemula. per loco in ord. pbilos. habita. Wittenberg 1692
  • Disp. inaug. theol. de consensu orthodoxorum orthodoxo in loco de Chrtsto, praeside D. Casp. Loeschero, illius auctorc defensa. Wittenberg 1694
  • Disp. synodalis de ritibus ecclesiasticis, ad art. XV. Aug. Conf. et art. X. shape. Conc. Accedit programina inviiatorium ad Col. II. 19. 1705

literature

  • Michael Ranfft : Life and writings of all Chursächsischen divine scholars. Deer, Leipzig 1742.
  • Hans Schröder : Lexicon of the Hamburg writers up to the present . Verlag Perthes-Besser and Mauke, Hamburg, 1854, vol. 2, p. 9 ( online )
  • Veronika Birckner-Albrecht: Pastors book of the church province of Saxony. Evangelische Verlagsanstalt, Leipzig, ISBN 3374021344 , Biogramme Br-Fa, Vol. 2, p. 275
  • Christian Gottlieb Jöcher : Compendioses learned lexicon. ( Online )
  • Hans-Joachim Böttcher : Dathe, Hieronymus, in: Important historical personalities of the Düben Heath, AMF - No. 237, 2012, p. 21.

Individual evidence

  1. not June 10 (historical spelling mistake)
  2. Andreas Dathe (born September 9, 1636 in Rochlitz; † March 1, 1703 in Hamburg) came to Hamburg in 1659 and was elected to buy flour on September 13, 1677, Bieraccise 16 September 1683, Oberalter 1696, present tense 1702, married 20 January 1664 with Magaretha, daughter of Hieronymus Mußmann. Other children: T. Magaretha (1665–1666); S. Liborius (1668–1694), T. Cecilia (born March 25, 1670 in Hamburg) m. 1692 with Johann Beckhoff; Magaretha (born October 6, 1671 in Hamburg; † May 16, 1731) m. January 13, 1700 with Senator Joachim Boetefeur; S. Andreas (* February 7, 1673 in Hamburg; † August 12, 1718 ibid) Jurat at the St. Katharinenkirche, married. November 5, 1703 with Elisabeth, daughter of the protonotary Albert Schulte. (Source: Friedrich Georg Buek : The Hamburg upper elders, their civic activity and their families. Perthes-Besser & Mauke publishing house, Hamburg, 1857, p. 176 ( online ))
  3. ^ Fritz Juntke: Album Academiae Vitebergensis - Younger Series Part 2 . Halle (Saale), 1952, p. 85