Johannes Romberch
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Johann Host von Romberch (born on a farm at Romberg or Romberch in Westphalia c. 1480, died at the close of 1532 or the beginning of 1533) was a German Dominican, and writer.[1]
He was one of the seven Dominicans who distinguished themselves in the struggle against Martin Luther in Cologne.[2] At the age of sixteen he entered the Dominican Order; he studied at the University of Bologna from 1516 to 1519.
In 1520 he was appointed to the theological faculty of the University of Cologne, and despite the many religious controversies he was engaged in, he found time for literary activity. The fact of his being appointed to the facility of Cologne University is proof of the opinion held of his orthodoxy in theology: that university held a sort of censorship over all the theological faculties of Germany.
His fellow members on the university faculty, Hoogstraten and Collin, besides being distinguished churchmen were eminent among later German Humanists.
Works
Among the works he edited are
- Burchard von Barby, Descriptio Terrae Sanctae
- Johann Faber, Antilogiarum Martini Lutheri Babylonia
- Dionysius the Carthusian, Commentarium in Psalmos.
He wrote many controversial works. He is known also for a 1520 book on the art of memory, Congestorium artificiose memoriae.[3] Host's last work was the Enchiridion Sacerdotum which was published at Cologne in 1532.
Notes
- ^ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Johann Host". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
- ^ The others were Jacob van Hoogstraten, Conrad Collin, Bernard von Luxemburg, Johann Pesselius, Tillman Smeling and Johann Slotanus.
- ^ ...a text that was widely read throughout sixteenth-century Europe..., Paolo Rossi, Logic and the Art of Memory (English translation 2000), p.20.
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Johann Host". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
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- German Dominicans
- 16th-century German Catholic theologians
- German male non-fiction writers
- 16th-century German male writers