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IGNAZ AURELIUS FESSLER (1756-1839)

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Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 294 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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IGNAZ AURELIUS

FESSLER (1756-1839)  , Hungarian ecclesiastic, historian and freemason, was born on the 18th of May 1756 at the
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village of Zurany in the county of Moson . In 1773 he joined the order of
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Capuchins, and in 1779 was ordained priest . He had meanwhile continued his classical and philological studies, and his liberal views brought him into frequent conflict with his superiors . In 1784, while at the monastery of
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Modling, near Vienna, he wrote to the emperor Joseph II., making suggestions for the better
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education of the clergy and
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drawing his attention to the irregularities of the monasteries . The searching investigation which followed raised up against him many implacable enemies . In 1784 he was appointed professor of
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Oriental
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languages and hermeneutics in the university of Lemberg, when he took the degree of doctor 294 of divinity; and shortly afterwards he was released from his monastic Vows on the intervention of the emperor . In 1788 he brought out his tragedy of Sidney, an expose of the tyranny of James II. and of the fanaticism of the papists in England . This was attacked so violently as profane and revolutionary that he was compelled to resign his office and seek
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refuge in
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Silesia . In Breslau he met with a cordial reception from G . W . Korn the publisher, and was, moreover, subsequently employed by the prince of Carolath-Schonaich as tutor to his sons . In 1791 Fessler was converted to Lutheranism and next
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year contracted an unhappy
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marriage, which was dissolved in 1802, when he married again .

In 1796 he went to

Berlin, where he founded a humanitarian society, and was commissioned by the
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free-masons of that city to assist Fichte in reforming the statutes and ritual of their lodge . He soon after this obtained a government appointment in connexion with the newly-acquired
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Polish provinces, but in consequence of the
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battle of
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Jena (18o6) he lost this office, and remained in very needy circumstances until 1809, when he was summoned to St
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Petersburg by Alexander I., to fill the
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post of court councillor, and the professorship of oriental languages and philosophy at the Alexander-Nevski Academy . This office, however, he was soon obliged to resign, owing to his alleged atheistic tendencies, but he was subsequently nominated a member of the legislative commission . In 1815 he went with his
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family to Sarepta, where he joined the Moravian community and again became strongly orthodox . This cost him the loss of his
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salary, but it was restored to him in 1817 . In November 182o he was appointed consistorial president of the evangelical communities at
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Saratov and subsequently became chief superintendent of the Lutheran communities in St Petersburg . Fessler's numerous-
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works are all written in German . In recognition of his important services to Hungary as a historian, he was in 1831 elected a corresponding member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences . He died at St Petersburg on the 15th of December 1839 . Fessler was a voluminous writer, and during his
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life exercised
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great influence; but, with the possible exception of the
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history of Hungary, none of his books has any value now . He did not pretend to any critical treatment of his materials, and most of his
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historical works are practically historical novels . He did much, however, to make the study of history popular .

His most important works are—Die Geschichten der Ungarn and ihrer Landsassen (10 vols .

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Leipzig, 1815–1825);
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Marcus Aurelius (3 vols., Breslau, 1790–1792; 3rd edition, 4 vols., 1799); Aristides and Themistokles (2 vols., Berlin, 1792; 3rd edition, 1818); Attila, Konig der Hunnen (Breslau, 1794); Mathias Corvinus (2 vols., Breslau, 1793–1794); and Die drei grossen Konige der Hungarn aus dem Arpadischen Stamme (Breslau, 18o8) . See Fessler's Riickblicke auf seine siebzigjahrige Pilgerschaft (Breslau, 1824; 2nd edition, Leipzig, 1851) .

End of Article: IGNAZ AURELIUS FESSLER (1756-1839)
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