Philipp Michel Novenianus

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Philipp Mich (a) el Novenianus (* in Haßfurt ; † 1563 in Halle (Saale) ) was a German medic and writer .

Life

Novenianus studied in Leipzig, where he obtained his bachelor's degree in philosophy in 1515 . Then he was a teacher at the grammar school in Göttingen and then rector in Einbeck . In 1518 he received the title of Magister in Leipzig . Around 1528 he was appointed councilor in Halle and received his doctorate in medicine.

Its popularity was so high that in 1556 it was appointed personal physician to Count Hans Hoyer von Mansfeld, who promised him to pay 25 thalers for life and provide an honorary dress. The success he achieved ensured that the close relatives of Count von Mansfeld also hired Novenianus as their personal physician. In 1557, Count Hans Ernst and in the same year also Count Hans Albrecht von Mansfeld appointed him their personal physician and promised him a correspondingly high salary. At the beginning of the 1560s, when the Counts of Mansfeld became increasingly indebted, Noveniaus was no longer paid. After he complained, Count Hans Albrecht dismissed him from his job as a country doctor in 1562, the other counts owed him the salary, so that Novenianus did not treat the counts any more.

His most important publication with the title Von den nöse Umbflechtenden Bauchflüsse und Durchlauff origin ... , which appeared in Wittenberg in 1558 by Hans Lufft and comprises 23 sheets, comes from his time as personal physician to the Counts of Mansfeld . In the work dedicated to Dorothea von Mansfeld (* 1493; † 1578), born von Solms, who worked as a recipe author and prepared medicines for Martin Luther , he gave various useful recommendations on diet.

Novenianus left behind the two sons Hans Lorenz and Benno Mich (a) el Novenianus who, after leaving Leipzig in 1574, tried to pay the salaries that the Counts of Mansfeld owed their father.

Fonts

  • Lucubratiunculae et carmina nonnulla: ad diversos quibus inter cetera nonnihil contra virorum obscurorum epistolarum obscurum authorem continetur. Valentin Schumann, Leipzig 1516.
  • with Christoph Hegendorf : Encomillum Sobrieta. Valentin Schumann, Leipzig 1519.
  • Elemental Hebraicum. Valentin Schumann, Leipzig 1520.
  • Declamatiuncula de literarum nostri temporis conditione. Martin Landsberg, Leipzig 1520.
  • Oratio in lavdem Hebraicarvm literarvm Lipsiae, in freqventissimorvm eruditissimorvm consessv. 1521.
  • Eyn schone ordinance from [n] den, the Pestilentz, vrsachen, Zceychen, Erczneyen: with sampt a useful regiment, a mercy council of the electoral city of Halle, from the ... Mr. Philippo Noueniano Hasfurtensi of the Etzney Doctorn attributed. Valentin Schumann, Leipzig 1529.
  • De Temperamentis sive complexionibus ac indicationibus curativis decreta. Melchior Lotter the Elder Ä., Leipzig 1534.
  • A nice pre-order of the regiment / because of the Ertzney to maintain the health of the people. Melchior Lotter the Elder Ä., Leipzig 1537.
  • From the bad, interweaving abdominal flows and passages / causes and knowledge / and how to curirn and drive away / because of the Ertzney. Made by Doctorem Philippum Michel Nouenianum. Anno 1558. August 31st. To honor [...] Frawen Dorothea / Born von Solmnitz / Greffin [...] zu Mansfeld vnd Heldrungen [et] c. Hans Lufft, Wittenberg 1558. ( digitized version )
  • From the ventricular flow, so the Rotewehe, or the Roterhur, Dysenteria, is called, item of Belly Flow Diarrhia, which before the Rotenwehe common allways care before. Where they originate from, and what their causes are, also how they are to be recognized, and because of the Ertzney curirn and expulsion ... Item, much more noble valued Ertzneyen, against the immeasurable and violent abdominal flow and flow of the children, put through. .. Gualterum Reiff. Around 1560-70.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Biographical data in the German National Library.
  2. Volker Wendland: The Countess of Mansfeld, an author of late medieval recipes. In: Medical Monthly , Volume 23, 1969, pp. 544-548.
  3. ^ Bernhard Dietrich Haage: The healing woman in poetry and reality of the German Middle Ages. In: Würzburg medical history reports. 11, 1993, pp. 107-132, here: p. 124.
  4. Peter Assion : The Countess von Mansfeld as Luther's medical advisor. In: Medizinhistorisches Journal , Volume 6, 1971, pp. 160-174.
  5. Alisha Rankin: Panaceia's Daughters: Noble Women as Healers in Early Modern Germany. University of Chicago Press, 2013. ISBN 9780226925387 . P. 2