Johann Wilhelm Fuhrmann

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Johann Wilhelm Fuhrmann (born November 9, 1750 in Ostramondra , † August 27, 1780 in Stralendorf ) was a German Protestant clergyman and university professor .

Life

education

Johann Wilhelm Fuhrmann studied and received his doctorate in 1775 at the University of Leipzig for Master of Theology.

Career

From 1778 to 1779 he was associate professor for theology and from 1779 to 1780 full professor for Old Testament and New Testament exegesis at the theological faculty of Kiel University .

In order to recover health, he traveled to the Mecklenburg Stralendorf and died there. His successor on the chair was Jacob Christoph Rudolph Eckermann .

Theological work

Johann Wilhelm Fuhrmann mainly dealt with the hermeneutics of the New Testament in his lectures . He explained the Acts of the Apostles , the Gospel of John , the Epistles of Paul to the Romans, Corinthians and Galatians and gave a critical overview of the New Testament writings in a special college. He also dealt with the exegesis of the Old Testament, especially the historical books. He also read about Roman antiquity and individual passages from Livy , Suetonius , Lucian and Sophocles .

In his work on the Pauline letters in 1778 in his work Subtilitatem interpretis NT in verborum notionibus ex contexta oratione definiendis commendat , he used examples to show how context and word meaning are related to one another.

Fonts (selection)

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Society for Schleswig-Holstein-Lauenburg History: Journal of the Society for Schleswig-Holstein-Lauenburg History . Univ.-Buchhandlung [in Komm.], 1875 ( google.de [accessed on July 21, 2020]).
  2. Jendris Alwast: History of the theological faculty part 1 1665-1865: From its foundation at the Christian-Albrechts-Universität until the end of the entire state . 2008, ISBN 978-3-8370-3129-4 ( google.de [accessed on July 21, 2020]).