Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 19 de jun. de 2023 · As a representative of the intellectual elites of his time, Sebastian Brant (1457–1521) was active in various cultural fields (Latin and German poetry, pious literature and theology, law, book illustration). The contributions in this conference volume, which marks the 500th anniversary of Brant’s death, documents his influence and reach, which have extended far beyond their time, in those ...

  2. BRANT, SEBASTIAN (BRANDT) German humanist author and satirist; b. Strassburg, 1457; d. there, May 10, 1521. He was the son of an innkeeper and entered the University of Basel (1475), where he taught Roman and Canon Law (1489 – 99). When Emperor Maximilian I ceded Basel to Switzerland, Brant returned to his birthplace and through the intercession of Geiler von Kaisersburg (1445 – 1510), a ...

  3. Das Narrenschiff von Sebastian Brant in europäischen Ausgaben vor 1500. Digitale Edition, erarbeitet vom Projekt Narragonien digital an der Universität Würzburg.

  4. Brant's position here now became untenable, and he decided to change his residence. 1494 he had published his poem "The Ship of Fools", which had won him great popularity. Geiler von Kaisersberg , the famous Strasburg preacher, had made it the basis of a series of sermons, and he now recommended the appointment of Brant to the vacant position of city-syndic in Strasburg .

  5. Ship of Fools ( Modern German: Das Narrenschiff, Latin: Stultifera Navis, original medieval German title: Daß Narrenschyff ad Narragoniam) is a satirical allegory in German verse published in 1494 in Basel, Switzerland, by the humanist and theologian Sebastian Brant. It is the most famous treatment of the ship of fools trope and circulated in ...

  6. Brant. ou. Sebastian. Brandt. Sébastien Brant, la Nef des fous. Humaniste alsacien (Strasbourg 1457 ou 1458-Strasbourg 1521), auteur de la Nef des fous, écrit en dialecte alsacien (1494). Sébastien Brant, la Nef des fous.

  7. Das Narrenschiff (Ship of fools) by the Basel lawyer Sebastian Brant (1458--1521) was one of the first lavishly illustrated works to be printed in the German language in the 15th century and one of the most popular. Following the first edition, which was printed in 1494 by Brant's old university friend Johann Bergmann, Brant's satire on human foolishness became a European bestseller.