Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Gottfried Arnold (5 September 1666 – 30 May 1714) was a German Lutheran theologian and historian . Biography. Arnold was born at Annaberg in Saxony, Germany, where his father was schoolmaster. In 1682, he went to the Gymnasium at Gera and three years later to the University of Wittenberg.

  2. 20 de may. de 2024 · Overview. Gottfried Arnold. (1666—1714) Quick Reference. (1666–1714), German Protestant theologian and devotional writer. His main work, the Unparteiische Kirchen- und Ketzer-Historie (1699–1700), is important as a history of Protestant mysticism and for its use of out-of-the-way documents.

  3. 1 de ene. de 2005 · Gottfried Arnold (1666–1714) Peter C. Erb. Book Editor (s): Carter Lindberg. First published: 01 January 2005. https://doi.org/10.1002/9780470776032.ch11. Citations: 1. PDF. Tools. Share. Summary. This chapter contains section titled: Arnold's Early Career. The Radical Turn. Defending Mystical Theology in the Established Church.

    • Peter C. Erb
    • 2008
  4. 14 de jun. de 2017 · Gottfried Arnold (Hymn-Writer) Born: 1666 - Small village in Saxony, Germany. Died: 1714 - Perleberg in Brandenburg, Germany. Gottfried Arnold was the son of a poor schoolmaster, and lost his mother while he was yet quite a child, Thus his early years were marked by struggle and hardship, and an absence of that home-tenderness which ...

  5. ARNOLD, GOTTFRIED. Evangelical mystic and Church historian; b. Annaberg, Saxony, Sept. 5, 1666; d. Perleberg, May 30, 1714. After absorbing pietism from Philipp spener in Dresden, he drifted toward radical spiritualism.

  6. ARNOLD, GOTTFRIED: Lutheran; b. at Annaberg (18 m. s. of Chemnitz), Saxony, Sept. 5, 1688; d. at Perleberg (75 m. n.w. of Berlin), Prussia, May 30, 1714. In 1685 he began the study of theology at Wittenberg but gave himself up to independent reading in early church history.

  7. In this thesis, I analyze Gerard's accounts of the heretics' myths, their teachings, and the heretics' criticisms of the church, church doctrines, and church rites. In the historiography, the heretics of Gerard's work are often identified with the Bogomils.