Johann Mannich

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Johann Mannich copper engraving by Wolfgang Kilian (1628)

Johann Mannich (* 1579 in Nuremberg ; † after 1637, Holy Roman Empire ) was a German Lutheran theologian and editor of a sacred work of emblems .

Life

According to the age given in Kilian's portrait, Johann Mannich was born in Nuremberg in 1579, according to another source in 1580. From October 1598 he completed a degree in theology at the University of Altdorf . In 1600 he received the title of Magister. After a job as a pastor at Igensdorf from 1604, he became a deacon at the Heilig-Geist-Spital in Nuremberg in 1611 . In addition, he served as preacher in the hospital and in the churches of St. Katharinen (1615) and St. Walburg auf der Vesten (1618). Around 1633 he became a senior at the New Hospital. As early as 1637 he was deposed because of an angry lifestyle. His further living conditions are not known.

In 1624 Mannich published Endres Im Hof, a sacred work of emblems with contributions from other authors. The Latin sub-texts for the copperplate engravings came from Christian Höflich. In 1636 he published the Secundinae Mannichianae, complaints on the death of Professor Daniel Schwenter .

Works

  • Nobile Vincendi Genus Patientia: this is seven different sermons from the noble conqueror of dear Gedult, Nuremberg, 1617.
  • Johann Mannich, Hieronymus Ammon, Christophorus Girsnerus, Michael Herr, Christoph Hoeflichius, Endres Im Hof, Peter Isselburg, Paulus Nigrinus, Melchior Rinder, Daniel Schwenter, Georg Volckhamer: Sacra Emblemata LXXVI In Quibus Summa Unius Cuiusq [ue] Evangelii Rotunde Adumbratur that is Seventy-six spiritual figures, in which each Evangelii Summa Kürtzlichen is depicted, Sartorius, Nuremberg, 1624. Digitized WBD
  • Johann Mannich; Daniel Schwenter; MMK; Jeremias Dümler: Secundinae Mannichianae after lament. M. Johann Mannichs Senioris in the New Hospital to the Holy Spirit / because of the unexpected / but blissful entry of Mr. M. Daniel Schwenters [et] c. ; Gethan in Nuremberg / January 23rd Anni 1636, Jeremias Dümler, Nuremberg, 1636.

literature

  • Georg Andreas Will: Johann Mannich. In: Nürnbergisches Gelehrten-Lexicon; or, description of all Nuremberg scholars beyderley sexes according to their life: Th HM, L. Schüpfel, Nuremberg, 1756, pp. 547f.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Georg Andreas Will: Johann Mannich, In: Nürnbergisches Gelehrten-lexicon; or, description of all Nuremberg scholars beyderley sexes according to their life: Th HM, L. Schüpfel, Nuremberg, 1756, pp. 547f.