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JACOB OF JUTERBOGK (c. 1381-1465)

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 114 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JACOB OF JUTERBOGK (c. 1381-1465)  , monk and theologian . Benedict Stolzenhagen, known in religion as Jacob, was born at Juterbogk in
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Brandenburg of poor peasant stock . He became a Cistercian at the monastery of Paradiz in Poland, and was. sent by the abbot to the university of Cracow, where he became master in philosophy and doctor of
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theology . He returned to his monastery, of which he became abbot . In 1441, however, discontented with the absence of strict discipline in his community, he obtained the leave of the papal legate at the council of Basel to transfer himself to the
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Carthusians, entering the monastery of Salvatorberg near
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Erfurt, of which he became prior . He lectured on theology at the university of Erfurt, of which he was rector in 1455 . He died on the 3oth of
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April 1465 . Jacob's main preoccupation was the reform of monastic
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life, the
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grave disorders of which he deplored, and to this end he wrote his Petitiones religiosorum
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pro reformatione sui status . Another
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work, De negligentia praelatorum, was directed against the neglect of their duties by the higher clergy, and he addressed a petition for the re-form of the church (Advisamentum pro reformatione ecclesiae) to Pope Nicholas V . This having no effect, he issued the most outspoken of his
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works, De septem ecclesiae statibus, in which he reviewed the work of the reforming
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councils of his time, and, without touching the question of
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doctrine, championed a drastic reform of life and practice of the church on the lines laid down at Constance and Basel . His
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principal works are collected in Walch, Monimenta med. aev. i. and ii . (1757, 1771), and Engelbert Klupfel, Vetus bibliotheca
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eccles .

(

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Freiburg-im-
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Breisgau, 178o) .

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