Mainz
Mainz , city (1994 pop. 185,487), capital of Rhineland-Palatinate, W Germany, a port on the E bank of the Rhine River opposite the mouth of the Main River. Its French name, also sometimes used in English, is Mayence. The city is an industrial, commercial, and transportation center. Chemicals, pharmaceuticals, machinery, glassware, and musical instruments are produced; the city is also a trade center for Rhine wines. Mainz is one of the great historical cities of Germany. It grew on the site of the Roman camp of Maguntiacum, or Mogontiacum (founded 1st cent. BC). The city was made (746-47) the seat of the first German archbishop, who was St. Boniface (c.675-754). The later archbishops acquired considerable territory around Mainz and in Franconia, on both sides of the Main, which they ruled as princes of the Holy Roman Empire. Very early they received a vote in the imperial elections and had precedence over the other electors ; they crowned the German kings. From the 16th cent., with the emperors-elect, the archbishops-electors were, ex officio, archchancellors of the Holy Roman Empire. Under the rule of the archbishops-electors Mainz flourished as a commercial and cultural center. Johann Gutenberg (c.1397-1468) lived in Mainz, which he made the first printing center of Europe. Occupied in 1792 by the French, the city was ceded to France by the treaties of Campo Formio (1797) and Lunéville (1801), and the archbishopric was secularized and reduced to a diocese in 1803. The last archbishop, K. T. von Dalberg, became (1806) prince-primate of the Confederation of the Rhine. The Congress of Vienna made (1815) Mainz a federal fortress of the German Confederation and awarded it, with Rhenish Hesse, to the grand duchy of Hesse-Darmstadt. The city was made (1816) the provincial capital of Rhenish Hesse. It was (1873-1918) a fortress of the German Empire. Mainz was severely damaged during World War II, but was largely restored and rebuilt after 1945. Noteworthy structures in the old inner city include the six-towered Romanesque cathedral (consecrated 1009; restored 19th cent.); the Renaissance-style electoral (archiepiscopal) palace (17th-18th cent.), which houses an art gallery and a museum of Roman and Germanic antiquities; and the Church of St. Peter (18th cent.). The Univ. of Mainz was founded in 1477, was discontinued in 1816, and was reestablished in 1946 as the Johannes Gutenberg Univ. In 1945 the city's suburbs on the right bank of the Rhine were transferred to the state of Hesse.
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Goethe's Reception of Ulrich von Hutten
Magazine article from: Goethe Yearbook; 1/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...Goethe recalls his discovery of the works of the humanist Ulrich von Hutten (1488-1523):"DieWerke Ulrichs von Hutten kamen mir in die Hnde und es schien wundersam genug...
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Friendship and Thomas More: using Erasa classroom mus's letter to Ulrich von Hutten as a tool in developing management plan.
Magazine article from: The Clearing House; 3/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...classroom management based on the letter Erasmus wrote to Ulrich von Hutten about More. The particular qualities that Erasmus...40). In the letter to Lutheran Reformation member Ulrich von Hutten in 1516, Erasmus described his dear friend Thomas...
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Roman and German Humanism: 1450-1550.
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 9/22/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...important in the collection, explores Ulrich von Hutten and Beatus Rhenanus' propagandist...Luther. Such was not the case with Hutten, however, who went on to become...In fact, I would argue that Hutten and Luther's challenge to the...
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Utopia, an Elusive Vision.(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 9/22/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...Erasmus. In his famous description of More sent to Ulrich von Hutten in 1519, Erasmus declares that More "had written the...sought in Erasmus' remarks about Utopia in his letter to Hutten, it is certainly in the sentence that precedes the...
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Kleine Schriften zur Literatur des 16. Jahrhunderts.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review; 1/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...taking as a starting-point Eberlin von Gunzburg's appeal for the needs...Struktur und Intention des Faust-Buchs von 1587' must surely he accounted one...Erasmus's Novum instrumentum, Ulrich von Hutten's edition of Lorenzo Valla's...
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Annelies Reinhold
Magazine article from: Film - Dienst; 3/1/2007; ; 487 words
; ...Reinhold ist "Paracelsus", 1943 von G. W. Pabst inszeniert; ein zwiespltiges...Gemtskrankheit leidet und schlielich von Paracelsus' Schler Johannes (Martin...Schulmediziner, Mathias Wieman als Ulrich von Hutten und dem genialischen Tnzer Harald...
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Autorbilder. Zur Medialitat literarischer Kommunikation in Mittelalter und Fruber Neuzeit.(SHORTER NOTICES)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Medium Aevum; 3/22/2008; 700+ words
; ...in the Buch der Beispiele of Anton von Pforr (based on the Pantschatantra...Jakob Locher, Heinrich Bebel, Ulrich von Hutten, Georg Sibutus, Johannes Stabius...edition of the sermons of Geiler von Kaysersberg, and the self-representation...
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Funktionen des Humanismus: Studien zum Nutzen des Neuen in der humanistischen Kultur.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 6/22/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...as represented by such figures as Conrad Celtis and Ulrich von Hutten. In a more pedagogic vein, school drama and religious...illustre established in Dillingen by Cardinal Otto Truchsess von Waldburg. He gives an excellent summary of the aims...
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The papal Antichrist: Martin Luther and the underappreciated influence of Lorenzo Valla.(Author abstract)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 3/22/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...Screaming in Luther's mighty grasp is the inquisitor Jakob von Hochstraten. Lying at Luther's feet are the decapitated...Naples. It remained in manuscript form until published by Ulrich von Hutten in 1519. (5) It begins with a short introduction that...
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The Civilization of Europe in the Renaissance.
Magazine article from: The National Interest; 3/22/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...confidence to undertake great deeds and carry them through. "Oh age! Oh letters! It is a joy to be alive," exclaimed Ulrich von Hutten at the beginning of the century, adding, "Woe to you Barbarians!" to display his pride in the culture he had...
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Ulrich von Hutten
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Ulrich von Hutten The German imperial knight and humanist Ulrich von Hutten (1488-1523) advocated the dissolution...medieval knighthood and feudalism. Ulrich von Hutten, born in a castle near Fulda in Hesse...
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Hutten, Ulrich von (1488–1523)
Book article from: The Renaissance
Hutten, Ulrich von (1488 – 1523...Reformation. Born near Fulda, Hutten was sent as a boy to a Benedictine...Martin Luther's side. Hutten took the Reformation one...Catholic militia with Franz von Sickingen. The two men led...
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Hutten, Ulrich von
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Hutten, Ulrich von, see Epistolae Obscurorum Virorum .
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Franz von Sickingen
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Franz von Sickingen , 1481-1523, German knight...as Holy Roman emperor. Influenced by Ulrich von Hutten , Sickingen aided persecuted reformers...romanticized, in Goethe's drama Götz von Berlichingen and in Wilhelm Hauff's novel...
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German literature
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...decline of chivalric poetry is evident in the works of Ulrich von Lichtenstein, and the rise of the urban literary traditions...also affected by humanism ; German humanists included Ulrich von Hutten and Conradus Celtes . The Thirty Years War (1618...
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