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  1. Johannes Pfefferkorn (original given name Joseph; 1469, Nuremberg – Oktober 22, 1521, Cologne) was a German Catholic theologian and writer who converted from Judaism. Pfefferkorn actively preached against the Jews and attempted to destroy copies of the Talmud, and engaged in a long running pamphleteering battle with humanist Johann ...

  2. 2 de abr. de 2024 · Johannes Pfefferkorn (born 1469, Nürnberg?—died 1522/23, Cologne) was a German controversialist—a Christianized Jew—and opponent of Jewish literature, whose dispute with the Humanist and Hebraist Johannes Reuchlin (q.v.) was a European cause célèbre in the early 16th century.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Johannes Pfefferkorn was an apostate and anti-Jewish agitator. Originally from Moravia, Pfefferkorn claimed to have been educated by a relative, Meir Pfefferkorn, a dayyan in Prague. A butcher by profession, he was convicted of burglary and theft, but released on payment of a fine.

  4. Johannes Pfefferkorn (1469 – 1523) was a German-Jewish convert to Catholicism who became a famous anti-Jewish polemicist. After associating himself with the Dominicans in the early 1500s, Pfefferkorn condemned Jewish religious tradition as intolerably anti-Christian.

  5. 24 de abr. de 2017 · Revealing the Secrets of the Jews: Johannes Pfefferkorn and Christian Writings about Jewish Life and Literature in Early Modern Europe. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110524345

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  6. Download Free PDF. “Conversion, Anti-Judaism, Controversy: The Rise and Fall of Johannes Pfefferkorn”, in The Jews’ Mirror (Der Judenspiegel) by Johannes Pfefferkorn. Translated by Ruth I. Cape. Historical Introduction by Maria Diemling. Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Tempe, AZ, 2011, 7-32.

  7. Overview. Johannes Pfefferkorn. (c. 1469—1522) Quick Reference. (1468/9–1522), German religious controversialist. He was raised as a Jew but converted to Catholicism in about 1504; after his baptism he secured the patronage of the Dominicans of Cologne, who ... From: Pfefferkorn, Johannes in The Oxford Dictionary of the Renaissance »