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  1. The Herborn Academy ( Latin: Academia Nassauensis) was a Calvinist institution of higher learning in Herborn from 1584 to 1817. The Academy was a centre of encyclopaedic Ramism and the birthplace of both covenant theology and pansophism. Its faculty of theology continues as the Theological Seminary of the Evangelical Church of Hesse and Nassau.

  2. La Academia de Herborna (en latín: Academia Nassauensis, en alemán: Hohe Schule Herborn) fue una institución cristiana reformada de enseñanza superior en Herborna desde 1584 hasta 1817. La Academia fue un centro de ramismo enciclopédico y la cuna tanto de la teología del pacto como del pansofismo.

  3. Palabras clave: Teoría del Estado – Política – Jurisprudencia – Teoría de la Constitución. ABSTRACT. Johannes Althusius set forth the first state theory ("Staatslehre") in the Modern legal-political thought. His work "Politica" was the outcome of the syllabus of the Herborn Academy.

  4. 30 de abr. de 2024 · This chapter considers the origins and development of German Ramism, its engagement with Melanchthonian thought, and the formation of a distinctive Philippo-Ramist synthesis. It focusses especially on Caspar Olevian, Johannes Piscator, and the influential Herborn Academy.

  5. The Herborn academy served as a model for Calvinist schools in Central Europe. For a comprehensive study of the importance of the Herborn academy for German Calvinism during the Reformation, see Gerhard Menk, Die hohe Schule Herborn in ihrer Frühzeit (1584-1660) (Wiesbaden, 1981).

    • Nabeel Hamid
  6. Herborn had its first documentary mention in 1048, and was granted the privilege of a city in 1251 by the Counts of Nassau. In 1584 the Herborn Academy, a Reformed (Calvinistic) institution, was founded by John VI of Nassau-Dillenburg, younger brother of William the Silent and namesake of today's Gymnasium Johanneum.

  7. 29 de sept. de 2011 · The Herborn Academy (established 1584) was long known as the centre for a non-scholastic, ‘life-centred’ approach to salvation, based on the irenic Reformed teachings of the Heidelberg Catechism (1563), This document had become not only a doctrinal teaching manual for laity, but also the chief confessional symbol of the Reformed ...