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JOHANN See also: history and topography, was See also: born at See also: Bruchsal (near Carlsruhe)
.
He was educated there and at Strassburg and See also: Heidelberg
.
In 1520 he was received as a cleric or See also: chaplain into the See also: order of the Knights Hospitallers or of St See also: John of Jerusalem, was sent in 1521 to the preceptory of that order at
See also: Freiburg in See also: Breisgau, ordained See also: priest in See also: Basel, and in 1522 placed in See also: charge of the preceptory at Bubikon (See also: north of Rapperswil, in the See also: canton of Zurich)
.
But See also: Stumpf soon went over to the Protestants, was See also: present at the See also: great Disputation in Berne (1528), and took See also: part in the first Kappa
.
War (1529)
.
He had carried over with him most of his parishioners whom he continued to care for, as the See also: Protestant pastor at Bubikon, till 1543, then becoming pastor at Stammheim (same canton) till 1561, when he retired to Zurich (of which he had been made a burgher in 1548), where he lived in retirement till his See also: death in 1576
.
In 1529 he married the first of his four wives, a daughter of Heinrich Brennwald (1478-1551), who wrote a See also: work (still in MS.) on Swiss history, and stimulated his son-in-See also: law to undertake See also: historical studies
.
Stumpf made wide researches, with this See also: object, for many years, and undertook also several journeys, of which that in 1544 to See also: Engelberg and through the See also: Valais seems to be the most important, perhaps because his See also: original See also: diary has been preserved to us
.
The fruit of his labours (completed at the end of 1546) was published in 1548 at Zurich in a huge folio of 934 pages (with many See also: fine See also: wood engravings, coats of arms, maps, &c.), under the title of Gemeiner loblicher Eydgnossenschaft Stetten, See also: Landen, and Volckeren chronikwirdiger Thaaten Beschreybung (an extract from it was published in 1554, under the name of Schwyizer Chronika, while new and greatly enlarged See also: editions of the original work were issued in 1586 and 26o6)
.
The wood-cuts are best in the first edition, and it remained till See also: Scheuchzer's See also: day (early 18th century) the chief authority on its subject
.
Stumpf also published a monograph (very remarkable for the date) on the emperor See also: Henry IV
.
(1556) and a set of laudatory verses (Lobspruche) as to each of the thirteen Swiss cantons (1573)• (W
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