Caspar Aquila
illustration from 19th century
Caspar Aquila (sometimes Kaspar or Gaspar Aquila; 7 August 1488Template:Snd12 November 1560), born Johann Kaspar Adler, was a German Lutheran theologian and reformer.
Biography
He was born at Augsburg, and educated there, at Ulm (1502), in Italy (he met Erasmus in Rome), at Bern (1508), and studied theology in Leipzig (1510) and Wittenberg (1513). According to his son, he entered the ministry in August 1514, while at Bern. He was for some time a military chaplain.Template:Sfn
In 1516, he became pastor of Jengen, near Augsburg, where he introduced ideas of the Reformation. Openly proclaiming his adhesion to Martin Luther's doctrine, he was imprisoned for half a year (1520 or 1522) at Dillingen, by order of the bishop of Augsburg; a death sentence was commuted to banishment through the influence of Isabella, wife of Christian II of Denmark and sister of Charles V. Returning to Wittenberg, he met Luther, and acted as tutor to the sons of Franz von Sickingen at Ebernburg castle. After the siege of the Ebernburg by Richard Greiffenklau, the archbishop of Trier, on 6 June 1523, he returned to Wittenberg to teach Hebrew, and aided Luther in his version of the Old Testament.Template:Sfn
The dates and particulars of his career are uncertain until 1527, when he became pastor at Saalfeld,Template:Sfn an office which Luther procured for him. In 1528, he was superintendent. He wrote Christliche Bedenken auf das Interim (Christian thoughts on the Interim, 1548), and Das Interim illuminiert (The Interim illuminated, 1548) in vehement opposition to the Augsburg Interim, and a warrant was put on his head by Charles V.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". This led him to take temporary shelter at Rudolstadt with Catherine, countess of Schwarzburg. In 1550, he was appointed dean of the Collegiatstift in Schmalkalden. Here he had a controversy with Andreas Osiander. Restored to Saalfeld after the peace of Passau, not without opposition, in 1552, he remained there, still engaged in controversy, until his death at Saalfeld.Template:Sfn
He was twice married, and left four sons.Template:Sfn
Works
He published numerous sermons, a few Old Testament expositions and some controversial tracts.Template:Sfn Besides the works mentioned above, other notable titles are:
- Christliche Erklärung des kleinen Katechismus etc. (A Christian explanation of the Little Catechism, etc., Augsburg, 1538)
- Fragstücke der ganzen christlichen Lehre (Questions on the entire Christian teaching; since 1547 many editions)
Notes
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References
Attribution:
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Script error: No such module "template wrapper". This work in turn cites:
- G. Kawerau, in A. Hauck's Realencyklopädie (1896)
- Template:Cite ADB
- Lives by: J. Avenarius (1718), J. G. Effinger (1731), Chr. Schlegel (1737), Fr. Gensler (1816)
- Pages with script errors
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- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica
- 1488 births
- 1560 deaths
- Writers from Augsburg
- 16th-century German Lutheran clergy
- German Lutheran theologians
- German Protestant Reformers
- German male non-fiction writers
- 16th-century German male writers
- 16th-century German Protestant theologians
- Leipzig University alumni
- University of Wittenberg alumni
- Academic staff of the University of Wittenberg