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CONRAD PELLICANUS (1478-1556)

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Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 70 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CONRAD PELLICANUS (1478-1556)  , German theologian, was born at Ruffach in Alsace, on the 8th of
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January 1478 . His German name, Kiirsner, was changed to Pellicanus by his
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mother's
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brother Jodocus Gallus, an ecclesiastic connected with the university of
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Heidelberg, who supported his
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nephew for sixteen months at the university in 1491-1492 . On returning to Ruffach, he taught gratis in the Minorite convent school that he might borrow books from the library, and in his sixteenth
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year resolved to become a friar . This step helped his studies, for he was sent to
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Tubingen in 1496 and became a favourite pupil of the
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guardian of the Minorite convent there, Paulus Scriptoris, a man of considerable general learning . There seems to have been at that time in south-west Germany a considerable amount of sturdy
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independent thought among the Franciscans; Pellicanus himself became a
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Protestant very gradually, and without any such revulsion of feeling as marked Luther's conversion . At Tubingen the future " apostate in three
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languages " was able to begin the study of
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Hebrew . He had no teacher and no grammar; but Paulus Scriptoris carried him a huge codex of the prophets on his own shoulders all the way from Mainz . He learned the letters from the transcription of a few verses in the
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Star of the Messiah of Petrus Niger, and, with a subsequent hint or two from Reuchlin, who also lent him the grammar of Moses Kimhi, made his way through the Bible for himself with the help of Jerome's Latin . He got on so well that he was not only a useful helper to Reuchlin but anticipated the manuals of the
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great Hebraist by composing in 1501 the first Hebrew grammar in the
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European tongue . It was printed in 1503, and afterwards ineluded in Reysch's
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Margarita philosophica . Hebrew remained a favourite study to the last . Pellican's autobiography de-
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scribes the gradual multiplication of accessible books on the subjects, and he not only studied but translated a vast mass of rabbinical and Talmudic texts, his
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interest in Jewish literature being mainly philological .

The

chief fruit of these studies is the vast commentary on the Bible (Zurich, 7 vols., 1532-1539), which shows a remarkably sound
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judgment on questions of the text, and a sense for
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historical as opposed to typological exegesis . Pellicanus became priest in 1501 and continued to serve his order at Ruffach,
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Pforzheim, and Basel till 1526 . At Basel he did much laborious
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work for Froben's
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editions, and came to the conclusion that the Church taught many doctrines of which the early doctors of Christendom knew nothing . He spoke his views frankly, but he disliked polemic; he found also more toleration than might have been expected, even after he became active in circulating Luther's books . Thus, supported by the civic authorities, he remained guardian of the convent of his order at Basel from 1519 till 1524, and even when he had to give up his
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post, remained in the monastery for two years, professing
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theology in the university . At length, when the position was becoming quite untenable, he received through Zwingli a call to Zurich as professor of Greek and Hebrew, and formally throwing off his monk's habit, entered on a new
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life . Here he remained till his
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death on the 6th of
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April 1556 . Pellicanus's scholarship, though not brilliant, was really extensive; his sound sense, and his singularly pure and devoted character gave him a great influence . He was remarkably
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free from the pedantry of the time, as is shown by his views about the use of the German vernacular as a vehicle of culture (Chron . 135, 36) . As a theologian his natural
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affinities were with Zwingli, with whom he shared the
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advantage of having grown up to the views of the Reformation, by the natural progress of his studies and religious life . Thus he never lost his sympathy with humanism and with its great German representative, Erasmus .

Pellicanus's Latin autobiography (Chronicon C.P.R.) is one of the most interesting documents of the

period . It was first publishedby Riggenbach in 1877, and in this
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volume the other
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sources for his life are registered . See also Emil Silberstein, Conrad Pellicanus; ein Beitrag zur Geschichte
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des Studiums der hebr . Sprache (Berlin, 1900) .

End of Article: CONRAD PELLICANUS (1478-1556)
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