Johannes Wyse

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Johannes Wyse , also: Weise, Weisse, Wyße u. Ä. Written, (* around 1410 in Rostock ; † November 1, 1486 in Leipzig ) was a theology professor.

Since Wyse was matriculated in Rostock in 1423, he was probably born around 1410. In Rostock he was awarded a Baccalaureus artium in 1427/28 and a master's degree in 1431. In 1435 he moved to Erfurt , from the winter of 1440/41 he worked in Leipzig - with the exception of matriculation in Greifswald in 1456 - where he obtained a licentiate in theology in 1460.

In Rostock he officiated as dean of the artist faculty in summer 1439, and in summer 1443 he was rector of Leipzig University . In the summer of 1447 he was dean of the Leipzig artists.

Book ownership

Wyse created several collective manuscripts on contemporary history, which are considered to be important sources, especially on university history. He was "an attentive and extremely curious contemporary with a penchant for logging and a keen sense for collecting and archiving, a stroke of luck for the historian". In Ms. 1674 of the Leipzig University Library, a chronical collection of material (approx. 1473–1482), there is a note that he bequeathed this manuscript with three other chronicles to the Great College in his will . For the other manuscripts, Marek thinks of Wejwoda

  • Leipzig, University Library, Ms.176, a Latin anthology from around 1440/50, particularly on the history of the councils of Constance and Basel
  • Leipzig, University Library, Ms. 1092
  • Leipzig, University Library, Rep. II 10a

In the Leipziger Ms. 158 a note mentions the announcement of a disputation by Wyse.

literature

  • Leipzig scholars and artists almanac for the year 1787, p. 106f. (not viewed)
  • Conradus Wimpina: Centuria . Edited by Johann Friedrich Ludwig Theodor Merzdorf. Leipzig 1839, p. 23 ( MDZ Munich ), the same text in Mader's digitized edition Halle
  • Friedrich Zarncke: The documented sources on the history of the University of Leipzig in the first 150 years of its existence . In: Treatises of the philol.-hist. Class of the Royal Saxon Society of Sciences 2 (Treatises of the Royal Saxon Society of Sciences 3), Leipzig 1857, pp. 509-922 ( SLUB Driesden ).
  • The same: Causa Nicolai Winter. A bagatell trial at the University of Leipzig in the middle of the 15th century . Leipzig 1890 ( SLUB Dresden ).
  • Detlef Döring : Unknown sources on the history of the Leipzig University from the holdings of the manuscript department of the Leipzig University Library. In: Jahrbuch für Regionalgeschichte 15 / I (1988), pp. 244–262, here pp. 245f.
  • Falk Eisermann: Leipzig single-sheet prints in the 15th century. In: Books, Printers, Libraries in Central Germany. New research on the history of communication and media around 1500. ed. by Enno Bünz , Leipzig 2006, pp. 373–399, here pp. 385–387.
  • Falk Eisermann: Archive material and chronic tradition as neglected sources of early printing research. In: Gutenberg-Jahrbuch 81 (2006), pp. 50–61, here pp. 57–59.
  • Beate Kusche: "Ego collegiatus" - The Magisterkollegien at the University of Leipzig from 1409 to the introduction of the Reformation in 1539. A structural and personal history investigation . Leipzig 2009, Vol. 2, pp. 669-671 No. 116 (not viewed)
  • Marek Wejwoda: When a political project becomes obsolete - the reform of the University of Leipzig in 1446 and the fate of the original version of the reform statute . In: City history. Announcements from the Leipzig History Association. Yearbook 2009, pp. 7–39, here pp. 21–25 ( excerpt from Google Books ).
  • Markus Hein / Helmar Junghans (eds.): The professors and lecturers of the Leipzig Faculty of Theology from 1409 to 2009 . Leipzig 2010 (not viewed)
  • Roman Deutinger / Christof Paulus: The Reich visits Landshut. The narrative texts for the princely wedding in 1475 . Ostfildern: Thorbecke 2017, pp. 209–215 ISBN 978-3-7995-1155-1 (edition of the report on the Landshut wedding from Ms. 1674)

Individual evidence

  1. The date of death according to: Annual booklet on the history of Leipzig and calendar on the memorial days of its most remarkable inhabitants. Klinkhardt, 1863, p. 123 Google Books .
  2. Wejwoda: Project, S. 22nd
  3. ^ Franzjosef Pensel: Directory of German medieval manuscripts in the Leipzig University Library, printed by Irene Stahl. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag 1998, pp. 267-273 manuscripta mediaevalia , handwriting census . Digitized version : manuscripta-mediaevalia .
  4. Wejwoda: Project, pp 23-24.
  5. Zarncke: Sources, pp. 718–724; Rudolf Helssig: The Latin and German manuscripts of the Leipzig University Library. Volume 1. The theological manuscripts. Part 1 (Ms 1 - 500) . Unchanged reprint of the 1926 edition. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz 1995, pp. 208–235 manuscripta mediaevalia ; Pensel, p. 14f .; Manuscript census . Digitized UB Leipzig ,
  6. Zarncke: Sources, pp. 725–726 (with wrong signature 1090); Rudolf Helssig: The Latin and German manuscripts of the Leipzig University Library . Volume 3. The legal manuscripts. Unchanged reprint of the 1905 edition - Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz 1996, pp. 219–234 manuscripta-mediaevalia ; Pensel, pp. 150-152; Manuscript census .
  7. Robert Naumann: Catalogus librorum manuscriptorum, qui in bibliotheca senatoria civitatis Lipsiensis asservantur . Grimma 1838, pp. 119–121 MDZ Munich ; Zarncke: Sources, pp. 726-728; Pensel, pp. 314-316; Manuscript census .
  8. Helssig 1926 .

Web links

Wikisource: Burgundian Wars  - Sources and full texts