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Philipp Nicodemus Frischlin

Philipp Nicodemus Frischlin

German philologist, poet, playwright, mathematician, and astronomer (1547–1590)

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Birthdate
September 22, 1547
Date of Death
November 29, 1590
Place of Death
Bad Urach
Bad Urach
Author of
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Operum poeticorum Nicodemi Frischlini Poetae, oratoris et philosophi pars scenica
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Nicodemi Frischlini Alemanni Dido
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Nicodemi Frischlini Facetiae selectiores
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Priscianus vapulans
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Susanna
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Educated at
Tübinger Stift
Tübinger Stift
Occupation
Author
Author
0
Astronomer
Astronomer
Scientist
Scientist
Writer
Writer
Poet
Poet
Mathematician
Mathematician
ISNI
00000001090081030
Open Library ID
OL324024A0
VIAF
517877390

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Citizenship
Germany
Germany
Wikidata ID
Q72975

Philipp Nicodemus Frischlin (also spelled Nikodemus) (22 September 1547 – 29 November 1590) was a German philologist, poet, playwright, mathematician, and astronomer, born at Erzingen, today part of Balingen in Württemberg, where his father was parish minister.

Life

He was educated as a scholar of "Tübinger Stift" at the university of Tübingen, where in 1568 he was promoted to the chair of poetry and history. In 1575 for his comedy of Rebecca, which he read at Regensburg before the emperor Maximilian II, he was rewarded with the laureateship, and in 1577 he was made an imperial count palatine (Comes palatinus Caesareus) or Pfalzgraf.[1]

In 1582 his unguarded language and reckless life made it necessary that he should leave Tübingen, and he accepted a mastership at Laibach in Carniola (nowadays Ljubljana in Slovenia), which he held for about two years. Shortly after his return to the university in 1584, he was threatened with a criminal prosecution on a charge of immoral conduct, and the threat led to his withdrawal to Frankfurt am Main in 1587. For eighteen months he taught in the Brunswick gymnasium, and he appears also to have resided occasionally at Strasbourg, Marburg and Mainz. From the last-named city he wrote certain libelous letters, which led to his being arrested in March 1590. He was imprisoned in the fortress of Hohenurach, near Reutlingen, where, on the night of 29 November 1590, he was killed by a fall in attempting to let himself down from the window of his cell.

Work

Frischlin's prolific and versatile genius produced a great variety of works, which entitle him to some rank both among poets and among scholars. In his Latin verse he often successfully imitated the classical models; his comedies are not without freshness and vivacity; and some of his versions and commentaries, particularly those on the Georgics and Bucolics of Virgil, though now well-nigh forgotten, were important contributions to the scholarship of his time. There is no collected edition of his works, but his Opera poetica were published twelve times between 1535 and 1636.

Among those most widely known may be mentioned:

the Hebraeis (1590), a Latin epic based on the Scripture history of the Jews

the Elegiaca (1601), his collected lyric poetry, in twenty-two books

the Opera scenica (1604) consisting of six comedies and two tragedies (among the former, Julius Caesar redivivus, completed 1584)

the Grammatica Latina (1585)

the versions of Callimachus and Aristophanes

the commentaries on Persius and Virgil

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