Online Encyclopedia

ANDREAS OSIANDER (1498–1552)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 350 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ANDREAS

OSIANDER (1498–1552)  , German reformer, was born at Gunzenhausen, near Nuremberg, on the 19th of December 1498 . His German name was Heiligmann, or, according to others, Hosemann . After studying at
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Leipzig,
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Altenburg and
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Ingolstadt, he was ordained priest in 1520 and appointed
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Hebrew tutor in the Augustinian convent at Nuremberg . Two years afterwards he was appointed preacher in the St Lorenz Kirche, and about the same time he publicly joined the Lutheran party, taking a prominent
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part in the discussion which ultimately led to the adoption of the Reformation by the city . He married in 1525 . He was
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present at the Marburg
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conference in 1529, at the Augsburg
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diet in 1530 and at the
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signing of the Schmalkald articles in 1537, and took part in other public transactions of importance in the
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history of the Reformation; that he had an exceptionally large number of
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personal enemies was due to his vehemence, coarseness and arrogance in controversy . The introduction of the Augsburg
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Interim in 1548 necessitated his departure from Nuremberg; he went first to Breslau, and afterwards settled at Konigsberg as professor in its new university at the call of Duke Albert of Prussia . Here in 1550 he published two disputations, the one De loge et evangelio and the other De justificatione, which aroused a controversy still unclosed at his
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death on the 17th of
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October 1552 . While he was fundamentally at one with Luther in opposing both Romanism and Calvinism, his mysticism led him to interpret
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justification by faith as not an imputation but an infusion of the essential righteousness or divine nature of Christ . His party was after-wards led by his son-in-law Johann Funck, but disappeared after the latter's execution for high treason in 1566 . Osiander's son Lukas (1534–1604), and grandsons Andreas (1562–1617) and Lukas (1571–1638), were well-known theologians . Osiander, besides a number of controversial writings, published a corrected edition of the Vulgate, with notes, in 1522, and a Harmony of the Gospels—the first
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work of its kind—in 1537 .

The best-known work of his son Lukas was an

Epitome of the
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Magdeburg Centuries . Sec the
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Life by W . Moller (
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Elberfeld, 187o) .

End of Article: ANDREAS OSIANDER (1498–1552)
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