Jacob Tydäus

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Jakob Tydäus (also Tide, Tiede, Tyde, Tydaei; born March 24, 1628 in Memel , † September 27, 1700 in Fischhausen ) was a German historian and Lutheran theologian.

Life

Tydäus attended high school in Danzig , where he drew attention to himself in 1649 with the defense of the dissertation De Justitia Universali . On May 6, 1650 he enrolled at the University of Wittenberg and began studying theology. To this end, he went through a basic philosophical study in line with the customs of the time.

At the philosophical faculty in Wittenberg, August Buchner taught poetry and rhetoric, Michael Wendler (1610–1671) in ethics, Reinhold Franckenberger in history, Andreas Sennert in philosophy, Christian Trentsch (1605–1677) in logic, Johann Sperling in physics and Nikolaus Pompeius (1591–1659) and Christoph Notnagel in mathematics. He is also likely to have attended the lectures at the theological faculty with the then professors Abraham Calov , Johannes Meisner , Johannes Scharff and Andreas Kunad .

After he had defended the dissertation Exercitatio Physica De Vita Et Morte under Pompey in 1653 , he moved to the University of Rostock in July 1654 . Here he acquired the academic degree of a master's degree in philosophy on October 9, 1656 and was admitted to the senate of the philosophical faculty in 1657. He was offered an extraordinary professorship in theology. However, in 1658 he returned to his East Prussian homeland, where in 1659 he found a post as an adjunct to Sigismund Weier at the University of Königsberg . He took over his professorship in history in 1661 and in the summer semester of 1668 he also took part in the Alma Mater's organizational tasks as rector . The destruction of the war until the Peace of Oliva in 1660 forced him to give up his professorship and to take up an office as archpriest in Fischhausen in 1669, which he held until the end of his life.

Works

  • De duck infinito
  • Quatenus lumine naturae cognosci potest
  • Dependentia causae secundae a prima
  • Statua salaria over Mos. 19, 26
  • De ritu sepulcrali veterum

literature

  • 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, 1751, Vol. 4, Sp. 1374.
  • Daniel Heinrich Arnoldt : Detailed and documented history of the Königsberg University. Johann Heinrich Hartung, Königsberg in Prussia, 1746, 2nd part, p. 397.
  • Georg Christoph Pisanski: Draft of a Prussian literary history in four books. Hartung Verlag, Königsberg, 1886, p. 250.

Web link

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Bernhard Weissenborn: Album Academiae Vitebergensis - Younger Series Part 1 (1602-1660). Magdeburg 1934, p. 480.
  2. Heinz Kathe : The Wittenberg Philosophical Faculty 1502-1817 (= Central German Research. Volume 117). Böhlau, Cologne / Weimar / Vienna 2002, ISBN 3-412-04402-4 .
  3. ^ Walter Friedensburg : History of the University of Wittenberg. Max Niemeyer Verlag, Halle (Saale) 1917.
  4. ^ Adolph Hoffmeister: The register of the University of Rostock III. Stiller Verlag, Rostock 1895, p. 181a, 193, 195.