Quirinus Cubach

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Quirinus Cubach

Quirinus Cubach also: Quirin Kubach (* 1589 in Darnstedt ; † 23 June 1624 in Jena ) was a German historian, lawyer and poet.

Life

Quirinus Cubach was the son of Johann Cubach and Elisabeth Fockerstadt. After he had laid his first educational foundations at the school in Niederroßla , he moved to the school in Weimar . As early as 1602 he was enrolled at the University of Jena , where he completed a degree in philosophical and legal sciences. After receiving his bachelor's degree in philosophy in 1605, he continued his studies at the University of Helmstedt . Returning to Jena, he completed further legal studies with Erasmus Ungebaur from 1612 , where he was able to prove that he defended a dissertation under the title Paucula - Haec De Iurisdictione Themata . He then wrote a few political legal treatises until 1617, from his pen, a two-volume compendium of German imperial law, which earned him a lot of recognition, appeared.

After obtaining his licentiate in law in 1618, he was appointed professor of history and poetry at Jena University in 1619. In this capacity he also took part in the organizational tasks of the Salana and was rector of the alma mater in the summer semester of 1623 . On June 11, 1624, he fell ill with a heated fever and died. His body was buried on June 25, 1624 in Jena, where an epitaph was also erected.

Cubach had married Rebecca Glitz (* around 1594; † October 6, 1657 Lichtenberg), the daughter of Johann Glitz, in 1615. There were two sons and one daughter from the marriage. The children are known to include the sons Quirinus Cubach (born March 23, 1620 in Jena), Johannes Quirinus Cubach and the daughter Anna Magdalena Cubach (born September 27, 1622 in Jena; † March 4, 1657 Lichtenberg), who in 1645 joined Johann Wolfgang Schmidt married. His widow married on December 6, 1629 with Valentin Pfretzschner (born July 29, 1578 in Pegau; † before 1657 in Lichtenberg).

Fonts (selection)

  • De Iure Connubiorum, ad tit. Instit. de Nuptiis potiora breviter attacta continens. II. Jena 1613 (Resp. Friedrich Coler, online )
  • Centuriae Quaestionum Illustrium. Jena 1614 ( online )
  • Centuriae Tres Quaestionum Illustrium Politico-Juridicarum: Qvas in Illustri Salana Approbante ... Ordine ipso Praeside ad disputandum prosuerunt Jevenes lectissimi ... Anno M. DC. XIV. Jena 1615, ( online )
  • De rerum divisione et dominio ipsarum acquirendo. Jena 1616 (Resp.Anton Gosman)
  • Brocardicorum Dd. Liber generalis: Quo in Communiores diversae Dd. Regulae ex probatoss. Erfurt 1616
  • Quibus in Plurimae Quotidianae utilissimae, nobilissimae, jucundissimae QQ. nudè proponuntur. Jena 1617
  • Resolutio Tituli De Donatione. Jena 1617 (Resp.Christoph Cluevus)
  • Jurisprudentiam Germano publicam. Erfurt 1617 ( online )

literature

  • Johann Caspar Zeumer, Christoph Weissenborn: Vitae Professorum Theologiae, Jurisprudentiae, Medicinae et Philosophiae qui in illustri Academia Jenensi, ab ipsius fundatione ad nostra usque tempora vixerunt et adhuc vivunt una cum scriptis a quolibet editis quatuor classibus. Johann Felici Bieleck, Jena, 1711, p. 67, (Philosophers, Online )
  • Cubach (Quirinius). In: Johann Heinrich Zedler : Large complete universal lexicon of all sciences and arts . Volume 6, Leipzig 1733, column 1795.
  • Christian Gottlieb Jöcher : General Scholar Lexicon, Darinne the scholars of all classes, both male and female, who lived from the beginning of the world to the present day, and made themselves known to the learned world, After their birth, life, remarkable stories, Withdrawals and writings from the most credible scribes are described in alphabetical order. Verlag Johann Friedrich Gleditsch , Leipzig, 1750, Vol. 1, Sp. 2239, ( online )
  • Luise Hallof, Klaus Hallof: The inscriptions of the city of Jena until 1650. Akademie Verlag, Jena, 1992, ISBN 3050019883 , p. 167

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Georg Mentz, Reinhold Jauernig: The register of the University of Jena. 1548 to 1652. Gustav Fischer, Jena, 1944, vol. 1, p. 71
  2. ^ Johann Christoph Olearius , Rerum Thuringicarum Syntagma. All kinds of Thuringian histories and chronicles, too many uses and exgetzes, so put together with diligence, together with necessary registers , Johann Christoph Stößel, Franckfurt and Leipzig 1704, p. 220, ( online )