Theodor Glazer

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Theodor Glazer (* in Meldorf ; † October 3, 1617 in Lübeck ) was a German lawyer and author.

Life

Glazer enrolled at the University of Rostock in 1598 as Glaserius, stating his origin . When he applied in writing to the council of the Hanseatic city of Lübeck in 1609 for a job, he could already refer to a long list of publications as an author. He was sworn in as Council Secretary of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck in May 1609. In 1614 he was placed alongside the decrepit protonotary Franciscus Knockert († 1619) in the management of the Lübeck Upper Town Book. His entries mark the change from Middle Low German to New High German law firm language in Lübeck. However, he died early in the autumn of 1617 and was buried in Lübeck's Marienkirche .

In addition to his legal writings and many occasional writings, he published the poems of the imperial Poeta laureatus and vice-principal of the Johanneum Scholar School in Hamburg Henning Conradinus after his death in 1590 on behalf of and at the expense of Hamburg's mayor Eberhard Twestreng .

literature

  • Friedrich Bruns : The Lübeck syndicists and council secretaries until the constitutional amendment of 1851. in: ZVLGA Volume 29 (1938), p. 148
  • Thomas Haye: Humanism in Schleswig and Holstein: an anthology of Latin poems of the 16th and 17th centuries; with German translation, commentary and literary historical classification, Ludwig, 2001 [Rejection by Samuel Rosenbohm , SHBL Volume 5, p. 236; Volume 9, p. 379] (digitized version)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Entry in the Rostock matriculation portal
  2. ^ Wilhelm Heinsohn: The penetration of the New High German written language in Lübeck during the 16th and 17th centuries , Verlag des Staatsarchiv zu Lübeck, 1933
  3. ^ JO Thiessens: An attempt at a scholarly history of Hamburg according to alphabetical order, with critical and pragmatic comments , 1783, p. 100 ff .; Wilhelm Sillem:  Twestreng, Eberhard . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 39, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1895, p. 37 f.