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  1. ABSTRACT. Intellectuals have been engaged in public life since antiquity: from Biblical prophets down to figures such as Machiavelli, Locke, Voltaire, Montesquieu, Rousseau, and other Enlightenment and later thinkers. This article focuses on the life and work of Johannes Reuchlin (1455– 1522). Its primary source is Reuchlin’s Expert Opinion ...

  2. Johannes Reuchlin (1455-1522) lebte zur Zeit eines großen Epochenumbruchs, an der Wende vom Mittelalter zur frühen Neuzeit, als das Judentum in ganz Europa verfolgt wurde. Als Anwalt der Menschenrechte und Streiter für Meinungsfreiheit und Toleranz sind die Botschaften des gelehrten Juristen, hochbegabten Sprachgenies und überzeugten Humanisten bis heute gültig.

  3. Reuchlin, Johannes (1455-1522). Humanista, helenista y hebraista alemán, nacido en Pforzheim (Baden-Württemberg) el 22 de febrero de 1455 y muerto en Bad-Liebenzell (Baden-Württemberg) el 30 de junio de 1522. Utilizó frecuentemente, según la moda humanista, el nombre latino de Phorcensis (‘de Pforzheim’), y a veces también el griego ...

  4. Celebrated German humanist, b. at Pforzheim, Baden, 22 February, 1455; d. at Liebenzell, 30 June, 1522. He studied at Freiburg, Paris, and Basle, where he won his baccalaureate in 1475, his degree of master in 1477, and later taught Greek and Latin; in 1479 he became bachelor of jurisprudence at Orléans, and licentiate of law at Poitiers in ...

  5. 29 de may. de 2018 · The most famous episode in Reuchlin's life was his controversy with the converted Jew Johannes pfefferkorn and the Dominicans of Cologne. Pfefferkorn had urged the destruction of all Hebrew books. Consulted by the emperor, Reuchlin argued (1510) that such a measure would be both unjust and disastrous for Christian scholarship.

  6. 6 de abr. de 2017 · Born to Georg and Elisabeth Eck in Pforzheim (Baden) on 22 February 1455, Johannes Reuchlin studied in Freiburg, Basle, Orléans, and Poitiers where he obtained his title of Magister Artium in 1481. Afterwards he was at the service of Duke Eberhard of Württemberg with whom he visited Italy in 1482.

  7. Reuchlin, who was one of the leaders of the German humanists, introduced the study of Greek and especially of Hebrew into western Europe, and was with Luther, Melanchthon, Erasmus, and Hutten among the promoters of the Reformation, although he declared himself against the movement in 1520. Studies Hebrew. During his second visit to Rome (1490 ...