Johannes Oecolampadius
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1482–1531, German Protestant reformer, associate of Huldreich Zwingli in the
Reformation in Switzerland. He was in 1516 a preacher at Basel, where he worked
with Erasmus on his New Testament. In 1520 he preached in Augsburg, then
for a time was in a convent at Altmünster. Martin Luther’s teachings won his
interest, and in 1522 he acted as chaplain among reformers under Franz von
Sickingen at Ebernburg and then returned to Basel to devote himself to the work
of the Reformation. He agreed with the views of Zwingli on the nature of the
Eucharist, defending this position against Luther in the Colloquy of Marburg,
1529, while Zwingli disputed the question with Melanchthon.
Johann Oecolampadius was born at Weinsberg in the present kingdom of Würtemberg in 1482, studied law in Bologna, philology, scholastic philosophy, and theology in Heidelberg and Tübingen with unusual success. He was a precocious genius, like Melanchthon. In his twelfth year he composed (according to Capito) Latin poems. Erasmus gave him the testimony of being the best Hebraist (after Reuchlin). At Tübingen he formed a friendship with Melanchthon, his junior by fifteen years, and continued on good terms with him notwithstanding their difference of opinion on the Eucharist.
Sebastian Münster
(1488-1552)
was a German cartographer, cos. mographer, and Hebrew scholar whose Cosmographia
(1544; "Cosmography") was the earliest German description of the world and a
major work - after the Nuremberg Chronicle of 1493 - in the revival of
geographic thought in 16th-century Europe. Altogether, about 40 editions of the
Cosmographia appeared during 1544-1628. Although other cosmographies predate
Münster's, he is given first place in historical discussions of this sort of
publication, and was a major influence on his subject for over 200 years.
In nearly all works about Münster, his Cosmographia is given pride of place.
Despite this, we still lack a detailed survey of its contents from edition to
edition, during the years 1544 to 1628, and an account of its influence on a
wide range of scientific disciplines. Münster obtained the material for his book
in three ways. He used all available literary sources. He tried to obtain
original manuscript material for description of the countryside and of villages
and towns. Finally, he obtained further material on his travels (primarily in
south-west Germany, Switzerland, and Alsace). Cosmographia contained not only
the latest maps and views of many well-known cities, but included an
encyclopaedic amount of detail about the known - and unknown - world and
undoubtedly must have been one of the most widely read books of its timeAside
from the well-known maps and views present in the Cosmographia, the text is
thickly sprinkled with vigorous woodcuts: portraits of kings and princes,
costumes and occupations, habits and customs, flora and fauna, monsters and
horrors. Münster divided his material into six books. Book I is a useful summary
of astronomical-mathematical and physical geography. Book II deals with England,
Spain, France, and Italy. Book III deals with Germany and surrounding lands.
Book IV embraces northern, eastern, and south-eastern Europe. Books V (Asia and
America) and VI (Africa) are of modest proportions.
This authentic leaf from one of the earliest editions of Cosmographia is devoted to Far East (De terris Asiae maioris), in particular to China. In his description of China, Münster relied largely on Marco Polo's book Il milione ("The Million"), known in English as the "Travels of Marco Polo". He refers to China as Cathay - the name by which North China was known in medieval Europe. The word is derived from Khitay (or Khitan), the name of a seminomadic people who left southeastern Mongolia in the 10th century AD to conquer part of Manchuria and northern China, which they held for about 200 years. By the time of Genghis Khan (died 1227), the Mongols had begun referring to North China as Kitai and South China as Mangi (Mangy, Manzi).
This leaf from Cosmographia consists of two parts. The first part, page 1097, deals with the Mangi province. Here, Münster basically repeats the information contained in the second Book "Il milione",. In particular, he talks about Quinsai (Kinsai, Quinsay, now Hang-chou, Hangzhou or Hangchow) - capital of Zhejiang Province. At the time of the Southern Song Dynasty, it was one of the largest and finest cities in the world, with over one million inhabitants. He also talks about towns of Caigui, Conigangui, Panchi, and the kingdom of Fugui.
The second part ot the leaf describes the vast province of Kansu (called "Tangut" by Marco) in Inner Mongolia. In 1038 the Tangut proclaimed their own kingdom of Hsi Hsia, which survived for nearly two centuries with remarkable stability despite a series of on-and-off border clashes with the neighboring states in North China. The kingdom's end came with the Genghis Khan's Mongols, who literally wiped out the Tan gut population (1226-33). Münster talks about the town of Sachion (Shachau) belonging to the Great Khan (magni Cham) . Although the Nestorian Christians and Saracens lived there, the majority were "idolaters" (idololatrae). They built a great number of monasteries and churches full of idols and devils, to whom they worshiped and offered the sacrifices. As a way of baptizing their children, says Marco (and Münster repeats after him), the idolaters would kill a large ram, offering it to the idol with great ceremony and praying for the well-being of their children. The idolaters also offered similar sacrifices in food to their dead before cremating them. The family of the dead would build a small wooden hut, swathed in silk and gold, on the path leading to the place of burning. When the funeral procession passed by that hut, it would stop there, and wine, meat and other food would be brought out. The relatives would wait for the procession to arrive at the place of burning with prepared sculptures of people, horses, camels, and with small round pieces cut out from parchment in the form of golden coins, putting them on the fire together with the body. Before the burning, the astrologers were invited and informed of the year, day and hour of the birth of the deceased. After the astrologers had determined under which constellation planet and sign the deceased was born, they proclaimed the day on which he should be burned. The body was kept, until that day, in the house and in a coffin of thick and nicely colored plates. To prevent decay they put camphor and spices in the coffin, and filled the fissures with tar and lime.