Johann Schultingh

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Johannes Schultingh (also: Johann Schulting; Schultingius ; * 1630 in Zwolle , † September 1666 in Nijmegen ) was a Dutch historian.

Life

Very little is known about Schulting's career. He is said to have been a favorite student of Johann Friedrich Gronovius (1611–1671), which suggests that he had completed his studies at the University of Groningen . In 1655 he became the first professor of philosophy and history at the then newly founded Old University of Duisburg, and on May 3, 1656, he went to the Illustrious Academie Nijmegen in the same position , where the plague ravaged him in early September 1666. It was not until January 9, 1667 that Christopher Wittich (1625–1687) gave him a commemorative speech, which is probably due to the plague that was rampant at the time.

His Annotationes in auctorem dialogi de causis corruptae eloquentiae vindt men in de editio Hackiana van Quinctilianus (1665) had brought him prestige in his time. They were included in the Seneca, Quinctilianus, en Calpurnius Flaccus (Amsterdam 1672) by Johann Friedrich Gronovius and in the Quinctilianus by Pieter Burman (Leiden), as well as in its 1720 edition of the Declamat. Calpurn. Flacci II, p. 791.

His sons Cornelius Schultingh and Antonius Schultingh came from his marriage to Catharina van den Berg .

literature

  • van Schevichaven: Schultingh, Johannes . In: Petrus Johannes Blok, Philipp Christiaan Molhuysen: Nieuw Nederlands Biografisch Woordenboek. (NNBW) Instituut voor Nederlandse Geschiedenis (ING), AW Sijthoff, Leiden, 1914, vol. 3, col. 269, (Dutch)
  • Abraham Jacob van der Aa : Biographical woordenboek der Nederlanden, bevattende levensbeschrijvingen van zoodanige people, who zich op eenigerlei wijze in ons vaderland vermaard made. Verlag JJ Van Brederode, Haarlem, 1874, vol. 17, part 1, p. 536, ( online , Dutch)

Individual evidence

  1. Deventer thinkers. De geschiedenis van het wijsgerig onderwijs te Deventer. Verlag Uitgeverij Verloren, Amsterdam, 1993, ISBN 978-90-6550-369-5 , p. 82, ( online reading sample )
  2. Engelbert Drerup: Studies on the history and culture of antiquity. 1930, p. 433
  3. ^ Oud Holland. Ter Drukkerij van de Uit gevers Geloroeders Binger, 1976, Vol. 17-18, p. 176
  4. * July 15, 1659 in Nijmegen; † June 12, 1725 in Amsterdam, was a preacher Noordwijkerhout (1686), Gorinchem (1687), Amsterdam (1693)