Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. academia-lab.com › enciclopedia › juan-eckJuan Eck _ AcademiaLab

    Johann Maier von Eck (13 de noviembre de 1486 - 13 de febrero de 1543), a menudo anglicanizado como John Eck, fue un teólogo, escolástico, prelado y pionero católico alemán. de la contrarreforma que estuvo entre los más importantes interlocutores y opositores teológicos de Martín Lutero.

  2. ECK, JOHANN (1486 – 1543), German Roman Catholic theologian known for his opposition to the Protestant reformers. Born Johann Maier in the Swabian village of Eck, he entered the University of Heidelberg at age eleven. Thereafter he studied at T ü bingen (master of arts, 1501), Cologne, and Freiburg (doctor of theology, 1510).

  3. La respuesta de Eck no se hizo esperar y ese mismo año publicó su obra De primatu Petri, una verdadera apología del papado contra los planteos luterano. El 15 de julio Johann Langius Lembergius, rector de la Universidad de Leipzig, pronunció el discurso de clausura, donde cada uno de los dos grupos reivindicó la victoria para sí mismo.

  4. 1 de ago. de 2022 · Illustration. by Julius Hübner. published on 01 August 2022. Download Full Size Image. An early 19th-century illustration by Julius Hübner showing Johann Eck (l. 1486-1543), the Catholic theologian and writer, in his debate with Martin Luther (l. 1483-1546) at Leipzig in 1519. (Galerie Neue Meister, Dresden, Germany)

  5. thebookofconcord.org › sources-and-context › johannIntroduction | Book of Concord

    The indefatigable opponent of Luther, Johann Meier von Eck, generally known as Dr. John Eck, Professor at Ingolstadt, once on friendly terms with Luther, but from the publication of the XCV. Theses, which he answered with his “Obelisks,” regarding himself as the chief support of the Papacy in its struggle in Germany, was on the scene.

  6. 13 de jul. de 2019 · This very week five hundred years ago, the champion of the Protestant Reformation Martin Luther was in the German city of Leipzig debating against the Catholic professor Johann Eck. Ironically, at a theological level the relatively unknown Leipzig Debate (1519) was infinitely more important than the publication of the famous 95 Theses (1517).

  7. Johann Eck (1486—1543) Quick Reference (1486–1543), German theologian. He came under humanist influences. Until the controversy over indulgences broke out, he ...