Johannes Magirus the elder
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26 March 1537
Abbot
Church leader
Veronika Grafegg
Johannes Magirus | |
|---|---|
Johannes Magirus (Oil painting by Gabriel Karg, 1604 Tübinger Professorengalerie) | |
| Born | Johannes Koch 26 March 1537 |
| Died | 4 July 1614 |
| Occupation(s) | Theological Scholar Abbot Church leader |
| Spouse(s) | Anna Fritz (ca. 1559) Veronika Grafegg (ca. 1588) |
| Children | ca. 10 including Johannes Magirus the younger (1560-1626) |
Johannes Magirus (26 March 1537 – 4 July 1614) was a German Lutheran Theologian.[1]
His name at birth, like that of his father, was Johannes Koch. The English language equivalent would be "John Cook". At some point he renamed himself "Johannes Magirus", reflecting an enthusiasm for classical culture that was common among many intellectuals of his time and place. Magirus ("Μάγειρας") is the Greek word for "cook."[2]
Life
Johannes Koch was born in Backnang in Württemberg.[1] He lost his father, the carpenter Johannes Koch through a fatal accident around 1540,[3] and underwent an impoverished upbringing, supporting his mother Magdalena (born Magdalena Kurtz).[1] As a boy he excelled at scholarship, especially in his study of Latin, raising concern on the part of a step father that he might be taken to Spain by Spanish soldiers of the Imperial army who were in Backnang in connection with the Schmalkaldic War between December 1546 and December 1549.[1] He was removed from school and apprenticed in a craft trade for more than a year in order to divert attention from his academic prowess, but by 1553, at the unusually youthful age of just 16, he was studying Theology with a scholarship to the University of Tübingen.[1] Continuing in his scholarly precocity, he became a Bachelor of Arts at the age of 18 and a Master of Arts at 20. In order to supplement his stipendium and fund his book buying habit, he was also operating as a wine dealer at this time. Two years later, in 1559, he obtained a post in Stuttgart as a deacon, becoming a deacon for the surrounding villages in 1561.[1]
Shortly afterwards ill health forced him to leave the city, and in 1562 he took up a diaconat at Vaihingen an der Enz, in the rural region to the west of Stuttgart. In 1567 he was appointed prelate (superintendent) and abbot at Maulbronn Monastery,[1] which the Duke of Württemberg had refounded eleven years before as a Lutheran brotherhood. On 25 October 1578, still aged only 41, he was appointed Provost of Stuttgart's Collegiate Church in succession to Wilhelm Bidenbach, which was the highest ecclesiastical office in Württemberg. He held office till his death 36 years later, widely commended as a true pastor, good preacher, able businessman and insightful theologian.[1] Along with his sermons, he published numerous pamphlets rebutting Catholic and Calvinist theological positions.[1]