Did Martin Luther suffer from vestibular migraine? [PDF]
Abstract Martin Luther (1483–1546) reported attacks of headache and of vertigo in his letters and in his lectures. The symptomatology of his headache attacks fulfilled, at least in part, the diagnostic semiological criteria of migraine. However, because we cannot be sure about the time pattern and the exclusion of other disorders that might explain the
Evers S.
europepmc +2 more sources
Protestan Reformunda Philip Melanchthon’un Yeri ve Evharistiya Anlayışı
Reform hareketinin önemli liderlerinden biri olan Philip Melanchthon, Protestanlığın temel ilkelerine dair yaptığı çalışmaların yanı sıra Lutherci teolojiyi şekillendiren kişi olarak tarihte yer almaktadır.
Merve Demirel
doaj +2 more sources
A question of genre: Philip Melanchthon's oratorical debut at Wittenberg University
Abstract The speech Philip Melanchthon gave on 29 August 1518 at the University of Wittenberg to initiate his professorship is an impressive piece of humanist idealism. Already its title, De corrigendis adolescentiae studiis (On the reform of the studies for the young) reveals his earnest ambitions in introducing reform.
Isabella Walser-Bürgler
exaly +2 more sources
«Instructions of the Visitors to Parishers in Electoral Saxony» by Philip Melanchthon: introductory article and the commented translation of the chapters «On everyday activities in churches» and «On schools» [PDF]
This publication is the first Russian translation of excerpts from Philip Melanchthon’s «Instructions». The text established the normative order (Ordnung), which should have been followed locally, both in terms of dogma (which covers a significant part ...
Zinaida Andreevna Lurie +1 more
doaj +1 more source
The life and work of Johann Reuchlin (1455–1522) has been investigated in the past primarily by Protestant authors pivoting around the views of Philip Melanchthon (1497–1560), who was Reuchlin’s relative and Martin Luther’s close collaborator.
Franz Posset
doaj +1 more source
An Unpublished Autograph Letter from Sir Philip Sidney to Carolus Clusius, 21 April 1576
Abstract Only a decade ago Roger Kuin's The Correspondence of Sir Philip Sidney (2012) offered scholars for the first time a complete edition of Sidney's correspondence. Kuin modestly allowed room for new discoveries, in the hope that additional letters might be identified.
Thomas Matthew Vozar
wiley +1 more source
Women as wives and rulers in Martin Luther's theology
Abstract This article offers a theological analysis of Martin Luther's complex view on women and their role in society, focusing on his exposition of the narratives of creation and fall in the Lectures on Genesis. Luther's understanding of women is defined by an ostensible paradox.
Sasja Emilie Mathiasen Stopa
wiley +1 more source
How Gabriel Harvey read tragedy*
Abstract In 1579, Gabriel Harvey bound together in a composite collection a surprising group of texts: an Italian grammar, an Italian translation of Terence’s comedies, Lodovico Dolce’s Italian rifacimenti of Euripides’ Medea and Seneca’s Thyestes, and Euripides’ Hecuba and Iphigenia in Erasmus’ Latin.
Tania Demetriou
wiley +1 more source
Regulation of school work in the German rules of the confessional era and the first German schools in Moscow [PDF]
The article discusses the activities of Martin Luther and his associates in the field of educational development, namely, Luther’s justification for the necessity of opening schools and teaching children the basics of the Christian faith and consequently
Maria Alexandrovna Poliakova
doaj +1 more source
The Seven Marks of the Unity of the Church
Abstract The Letter to the Ephesians is the first biblical text to reflect on systematically, and even to undertake programmatically, the development of a hermeneutically reflected theology of unity for the worldwide church. Its relevance for current ecumenical discussions lies in the fact that it sets out seven characteristics for the unity of the ...
Ulrich Heckel
wiley +1 more source

