<P>At the beginning of this volume, Erasmus leaves Louvain to live in Basel. Weary from the many controversies reflected in the letters of the previous volumes, he is also anxious to see the annotations to his third edition of the New Testament through Johann Frobenβs press. Above all he fears that
The Correspondence of Erasmus: Letters 1658-1801 (1526-1527)
β Scribed by Desiderius Erasmus, Charles G. Nauert, Alexander Dalzell
- Publisher
- University of Toronto Press
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 775
- Series
- Collected Works of Erasmus Volume 12
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The letters in Volume 12 cover Erasmus' correspondence for all of 1526 and roughly the first quarter of 1527. This was a difficult period for Erasmus for various reasons, including two bouts of illness serious enough to cause him to draw up his first will in January 1527, and the fact that the Reformers were gaining more and more influence over religious policy in Basel, where he resided. Tension caused by Erasmus' open opposition to this trend was multiplied by the continuing decline in his relations with Oecolampadius, Pellicanus, and Zwingli, all of them former friends or even collaborators in his scholarly editions. These many distractions slowed but did not stop his continuing biblical, patristic, and classical scholarship.
Fearing that the Lutherans might gain complete control of public discourse on the disputed issue of free will, Erasmus rushed to complete his rebuttal to Luther's De servo arbitrio in March 1526. He also felt deeply aggrieved by the attacks launched against him by conservative Catholics at a time when he was actively engaged in opposing the spread of heresy in Germany and Switzerland. His most redoubtable antagonist was Nodl BTda of the University of Paris, who pressed ahead with his plans for a condemnation of Erasmus by the faculty, which he achieved in December 1527. Erasmus' critics at Louvain were more discreet than BTda; their published works obliquely criticized his publications but did not attack him by name. The letters of 1526-1527 also reflect Erasmus' growing fame in Spain, where not only the Latinate intellectuals but also readers of the new Spanish translations of his spiritual writings and satirical works were attracted to his ideas of spiritual renewal.
CWE 12 also contains translations of his earliest will and selections from correspondence among his Spanish admirers during the years 1522-1527. An important and extremely useful appendix, 'Money, Wages, and Real Incomes in the Age of Erasmus,' by John H. Munro, analyzes the purchasing power of money in the period 1500-1540.
Volume 12 of the Collected Works of Erasmus series.
β¦ Subjects
Church History;Churches & Church Leadership;Theology;Angelology & Demonology;Anthropology;Apologetics;Catholic;Christology;Creationism;Ecclesiology;Ecumenism;Eschatology;Ethics;Fundamentalism;Gnosticism;Historical;Liberation;Mysticism;Pneumatology;Process;Prophecy;Protestant;Salvation Theory;Systematic;Europe;France;Germany;Great Britain;Greece;Italy;Rome;Russia;Spain & Portugal;Historical;Biographies & Memoirs;Religious;Leaders & Notable People;Biographies & Memoirs;Philosophers;Professionals &
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<P>The tranquil world reflected in Erasmusβ early letters from Louvain gradually disintegrated in the years covered by Volume 7. In the letters of Volume 8, which spans the period of Erasmusβ last fifteen months in the Netherlands and his move to Basel during 1520 and 1521, his situation worsens.</P
<P>The Peasant's War in Germany and his own ill-health combined to keep Erasmus confined to the city of Basel during 1525, but he was still able to maintain an active correspondence spanning all of Europe. In the preceding year, he had published De libero artbitrio/Freedom of the Will, his first ope
<p>The letters in this volume cover Erasmus's correspondence for all of 1526 and roughly the first quarter of 1527, a difficult period marked by two bouts of acute illness and attacks launched against him by conservative Catholics.</p>
<P>A painful time in Erasmus' life is reflected in this volume of letters. As the two volumes immediately previous to this one indicated, Erasmus' first two years in Louvain were agreeable, productive, and carefree. But the spirit of congenial scholarship in which he lived at this time was gradually