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KARL FRIEDRICH BAHRDT (1741-1792)

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 212 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KARL

FRIEDRICH BAHRDT (1741-1792)  , German theologian and adventurer, was born on the 25th of August 1741 at
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Bischofswerda, where his
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father, afterwards professor,
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canon and general superintendent at
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Leipzig, was pastor . At the age of sixteen young Bahrdt, a precocious lad whose training had been grossly neglected, began to study
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theology under the orthodox mystic, Christian August Crusius (1715-1775), who in 1757 had become first professor in the theological faculty . The boy varied the monotony of his studies by pranks which revealed his unbalanced character, including an attempt to raise
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spirits with the aid of Dr Faust's Hollenzwang . His orthodoxy was. however, unimpeachable, his talent cotispicuous, and in 1761 he was appointed lecturer on biblical exegesis, and preacher (Katechet) at the church of St Peter . His eloquence soon gave him a reputation, and in 1766 he was appointed professor extraordinarius of biblical
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philology . Two years later, however, the scandals of his private
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life led to his dismissal . In spite of this he succeeded in obtaining the chair of biblical antiquities in the philosophical faculty at
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Erfurt . The
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post was unpaid, and Bahrdt, who had now married, lived by taking pupils and keeping an
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inn . He had meanwhile obtained the degree of doctor of theology from
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Erlangen, and was
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clever enough to persuade the Erfurt authorities to appoint him professor designate of theology . His
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financial troubles and coarse and truculent character, however; soon made the
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town too hot to hold him; and in 1771 he was glad to accept the offer of the post of professor of theology and preacher at
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Giessen . Thus far B ahrdt's orthodoxy had counterbalanced his character; but at Giessen, where his behaviour was no less objectionable than elsewhere, he gave a handle to his enemies by a change in his public attitude towards religion . The climax came with the publication of his Neueste O fenbarungen Gottes in Briefen and Erzahlungen (1773-1775), purporting to be a " model version " of the New Testament, rendered, with due regard to enlightenment, into
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modern German .

The

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book is remembered solely through Goethe's scornful attack on its want of taste; its immediate effect was to produce Bahrdt's expulsion from Giessen . He was lucky enough at once to find a post as
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principal of the educational institution established in his chateau at Marschlins by the Swiss statesman Ulysses von Salis (1728-1800) . The school had languished since the
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death of its founder and first head, Martin Planta (1727-1772), and von Salis hoped to revive it by reconstituting it as a " Philanthropin " under Bahrdt's management . The experiment was a failure; Bahrdt, never at ease under the strict discipline maintained by von Salis, resigned in 1777, and the school was closed . At the invitation of the count of
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Leiningen-Dachsburg, Bahrdt now went as general superintendent to Diirkheim on the Hardt; his luckless
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translation of the Testament, however, pursued him, and in 1778 he was suspended by a decision of the high court of the
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Empire . In dire poverty he fled, in 1779, to Halle, where in spite of the opposition of the senate and the theologians, he obtained through the
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interest of the Prussian minister, von Zedlitz, permission to lecture on subjects other than theology . Forced to
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earn a living by writing, he
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developed an astounding
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literary activity . His orthodoxy had now quite gone by the board, and all his efforts were directed to the propaganda of a " moral
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system " which should replace supernatural
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Christianity . By such means Bahrdt succeeded in maintaining himself until, on the death of Frederick the
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Great, the religious reaction set in at the Berlin court . The strain of writing had forced him to give up his lectures, and he had again opened an inn on the Weinberg near Halle . Here he lived with his
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mistress and his daughters—he had repudiated his wife—in disreputable peace until 1789, when he was condemned to a
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year's imprisonment for a
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lampoon on the Prussian religious edict of 1788 . His year's enforced leisure he spent in writing indecent stories, coarse polemics, and an autobiography which is described as " a mixture of lies,
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hypocrisy and self-prostitution." He died on the 23rd of
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April 1792 .

See life, with detailed bibliography, by

Paul Tschakert in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopadie; a more favourable account is given in J . M . Robertson's Short
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History of Freethought, ii . 278 .

End of Article: KARL FRIEDRICH BAHRDT (1741-1792)
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