Online Encyclopedia

ULRICH VON HUTTEN (1488—1523)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 15 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

See also:
ULRICH VON HUTTEN (1488—1523)  , was born on the 21st of
See also:
April 1488, at the castle of Steckelberg, near
See also:
Fulda, in Hesse . Like Erasmus or Pirckheimer, he was one of those men who form the
See also:
bridge between Humanists and Reformers . He lived with both, sympathized with both, though he died before the Reformation had time fully to develop . His
See also:
life may be divided into four parts: his youth and cloister-life (1488—1504); his wanderings in pursuit of knowledge (1504—1515); his strife with
See also:
Ulrich of
See also:
Wurttemberg (1515—1519); and his connexion with the Reformation (1519—1523) . Each of these periods had its own
See also:
special antagonism, which coloured Hutten's career: in the first, his horror of dull monastic routine; in the second, the
See also:
ill-treatment he met with at Greifswald; in the third, the crime of Duke Ulrich; in the
See also:
fourth, his disgust with Rome and with Erasmus . He was the eldest son of a poor and not undistinguished knightly
See also:
family . As he was mean of stature and sickly his
See also:
father destined him for the cloister, and he was sent to the
See also:
Benedictine house at Fulda; the thirst for learning there seized on him, and in 1505 he fled from the monastic life, and won his freedom with the sacrifice of his worldly prospects, and at the cost of incurring his father's undying anger . From the Fulda cloister he went first to Cologne, next to
See also:
Erfurt, and then to
See also:
Frankfort-on-Oder on the opening in 1506 of the new university of that
See also:
town . For a time he was in
See also:
Leipzig, and in 15o8 we find him a shipwrecked
See also:
beggar on the Pomeranian coast . In 1509 the university of Greifswald welcomed him, but here too those who at first received him kindly became his foes; the sensitive ill-regulated youth, who took the liberties of genius, wearied his burgher patrons; they could not
See also:
brook the poet's airs and vanity, and ill-timed assertions of his higher rank . Wherefore he
See also:
left Greifswald, and as he went was robbed of clothes and books, his only baggage, by the servants of his
See also:
late friends; in the dead of winter,
See also:
half starved, frozen, penniless, he reached
See also:
Rostock . Here again the Humanists received him gladly, and under their
See also:
protection he wrote against his Greifswald patrons, thus beginning the long list of his satires and fierce attacks on
See also:
personal or public foes .

Rostock could not hold him long; he wandered on to

See also:
Wittenberg and Leipzig, and thence to Vienna, where he hoped to win the emperor Maximilian's favour by an elaborate
See also:
national poem on the war with Venice . But neither Maximilian nor the university of Vienna would lift a hand for him, and he passed into Italy, where, at Pavia, he sojourned throughout 1511 and
See also:
part of 1512 . In the latter
See also:
year his studies were interrupted by war; in the siege of Paviaby papal troops and Swiss, he was plundered by both sides, and escaped, sick and penniless, to Bologna; on his recovery he even took service as a private soldier in the emperor's army . This dark period lasted no long time; in 1514 he was again in Germany, where, thanks to his poetic gifts and the friendship of Eitelwolf von Stein (d . 1515), he won the favour of the elector of Mainz, Archbishop Albert of
See also:
Brandenburg . Here high dreams of a learned career rose on him; Mainz should be made the metropolis of a
See also:
grand Humanist
See also:
movement, the centre of good style and
See also:
literary form . But the
See also:
murder in 1515 of his relative Hans von Hutten by Ulrich, duke of Wurttemberg, changed the whole course of his life; satire, chief
See also:
refuge of the weak, became Hutten's weapon; with one hand he took his part in the famous Epistolae obscurorum virorum, and with the other launched scathing letters, eloquent Ciceronian orations, or biting satires against the duke . Though the emperor was too lazy and indifferent to smite a
See also:
great prince, he took Hutten under his protection and bestowed on him the honour of a laureate
See also:
crown .in 1517 . Hutten, who had meanwhile revisited Italy, again attached himself to the electoral court at Mainz; and he was there when in 1518 his friend Pirckheimer wrote, urging
See also:
trim to abandon the court and dedicate himself to letters . We have the poet's long reply, in an
See also:
epistle on his " way of life," an amusing mixture of earnestness and vanity, self-satisfaction and satire; he tells his friend that his career is just begun, that he has had twelve years of wandering, and will now enjoy himself a while in patriotic literary
See also:
work; that he has by no means deserted the humaner studies, but carries with him a little library of standard books . Pirckheimer in his burgher life may have ease and even luxury; he, a knight of the
See also:
empire, how can he condescend to obscurity ? He must abide where he can shine .

In 1519 he issued in one

See also:
volume his attacks on Duke Ulrich, and then,
See also:
drawing sword, took part in the private war which overthrew that prince; in this affair he became intimate with Franz von Sickingen, the champion of the knightly order (Ritterstand) . Hutten now warmly and openly espoused the Lutheran cause, but he was at the same time mixed up in the attempt of the " Ritterstand " to assert itself as the militia of the empire against the independence of the German princes . Soon after this time he discovered at Fulda a copy of the manifesto of the emperor Henry IV. against Hildebrand, and published it with comments as an attack on the papal claims over Germany . He hoped thereby to
See also:
interest the new emperor Charles V., and the higher orders in the empire, in behalf of German liberties; but the
See also:
appeal failed . What Luther had achieved by speaking to cities and
See also:
common folk in homely phrase, because he touched heart and conscience, that the far finer weapons of Hutten failed to effect, because he tried to touch the more cultivated sympathies and dormant patriotism of princes and bishops, nobles and knights . And so he at once gained an undying name in the republic of letters and ruined his own career . He showed that the artificial verse-making of the Humanists could be connected with the new outburst of genuine German
See also:
poetry . The Minnesinger was gone; the new national singer, a Luther or a Hans Sachs, was heralded by the stirring lines of Hutten's pen . These have in them a splendid natural swing and ring, strong and patriotic, though unfortunately addressed to knight and
See also:
landsknecht rather than to the German
See also:
people . The poet's high dream of a knightly national regeneration had a rude awakening . The attack on the papacy, and Luther's vast and sudden popularity, frightened Elector Albert, wwh9 dismissed Hutten from his court . Hoping for imperial favour, he betook himself to Charles V.; but that young prince would have none of him .

So he returned to his friends, and they rejoiced greatly to see him still alive; for

Pope Leo X. had ordered him to be arrested and sent to Rome, and assassins dogged his steps . He now attached himself more closely to Franz von Sickingen and the knightly movement . This also came to a disastrous end in the capture of the Ebernberg, and Sickingen's
See also:
death; the higher nobles had triumphed; the archbishops avenged themselves on Lutheranism as interpreted by the knightly order . With Sickingen Hutten also finally fell . He fled to Basel, where Erasmus refused to see him, both for fear of his loathsome diseases, and also because the beggared knight was sure to borrow
See also:
money from him . A paper war consequently broke out between the two Humanists, which embittered Hutten's last days, and stained the memory of Erasmus . From Basel Ulrich dragged himself to Mulhausen; and when the vengeance of Erasmus drove him thence, he went to Zurich . There the large heart of Zwingli welcomed him; he helped him with money, and found him a quiet refuge with the pastor of the little isle of Ufnau on the Zurich lake . There the frail and worn-out poet, writing swift satire to the end, died at the end of August or beginning of September 1523 at the age of
See also:
thirty-five . He left behind him some debts due to compassionate friends; he did not even own a single
See also:
book, and all his goods amounted to the clothes on his back, a bundle of letters, and that valiant pen which had fought so many a sharp
See also:
battle, and had won for the poor knight-errant a sure place in the annals of literature . Ulrich von Hutten is one of those men of genius at whom propriety is shocked, and whom the mean-spirited avoid . Yet through his short and buffeted life he was befriended, with wonderful charity and
See also:
patience, by the chief leaders of the Humanist movement .

For, in spite of his irritable vanity, his immoral life and habits, his odious diseases, his painful restlessness, Hutten had much in him that strong men could love . He passionately loved the truth, and was ever open to all good influences . He was a patriot, whose soul soared to ideal schemes and a grand utopian restoration of his

country . In spite of all, his was a frank and noble nature; his faults chiefly the faults of genius ill-controlled, and of a life cast in the eventful changes of an age of novelty . A swarm of writings issued from his pen; at first the smooth elegance of his Latin
See also:
prose and verse seemed strangely to
See also:
miss his real character; he was the
See also:
Cicero and Ovid of Germany before he became its Lucian .
See also:
Heidelberg and
See also:
Jena . In 1594 he began to give theological lectures at Jena, and in 1596 accepted a call as professor of
See also:
theology at Wittenberg, where he died on the 23rd of
See also:
October 1616 . Hutter was a stern champion of Lutheran orthodoxy, as set down in the confessions and embodied in his own Compendium locorum theologicorum (161o; reprinted 1863), being so faithful to his master as to win the title of " Luther redonatus." In reply to Rudolf Hospinian's Concordia discors (1607), he wrote a work, rich in
See also:
historical material but one-sided in its
See also:
apologetics, Concordia concors (1614), defending the formula of Concord, which he regarded as inspired . His Irenicum vere christianum is directed against David Pareus (1548-1622), professor primariusat Heidelberg, who in Irenicum sire de unione et synodo Evangelicorum (1614) had pleaded for a reconciliation of Lutheranism and Calvinism; his Calvinista aulopoliticus (161o) was written against the " damnable Calvinism " which was becoming prevalent in Holstein and Brandenburg . Another work, based on the formula of Concord, was entitled Loci communes theologici .

End of Article: ULRICH VON HUTTEN (1488—1523)
[back]
PHILIPP VON HUTTEN (c. 1511—1546)
[next]
LEONHARD HUTTER (1563-1616)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.