Wolfgang Capito Information & Wolfgang Capito Links at HealthHaven.com
advertise
add site
services
publishers
database
health videos
Bookmark and Share

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 
about
toolbar
stats
live show
health store
more stuff
JOIN/LOGIN
Featured Results:
- Letter from Congresswoman...
- Letter from Congresswoman...
wvpta.org
 DocArt.com - Portrait of Wolfgang Starke M.D.
DocArt.com - Portrait of Wolfgang Starke M.D.
docart.com
 IOLMaster Lens Constants Wolfgang Haigis ULIB Users Group Laser...
IOLMaster Lens Constants Wolfgang Haigis ULIB Users Group Laser...
doctor-hill.com
  Wolfgang Luckmann - Chinese Therapeutic Massage
Wolfgang Luckmann - Chinese Therapeutic Massage
wolfgangluckmann.com
 

Wolfgang Fabricius Capito (or Köpfel) (1478 – November 1541) German reformer, was born of humble parentage at Haguenau in Alsace.

Wolfgang Capito

[edit] His life and work

Capito was educated for the medical profession, but also studied law, and applied himself so earnestly to theology that he received the doctorate in that faculty also, and, having joined the Benedictines, taught for some time at Freiburg. He acted for three years as pastor in Bruchsal, and was then called to the cathedral church of Basel (1515). Here he made the acquaintance of Zwingli and began to correspond with Luther.

In 1519 he removed to Mainz at the request of Albrecht, archbishop of that city, who soon made him his chancellor. In 1523 he settled at Strassburg, where he remained till his death in November 1541. He had found it increasingly difficult to reconcile the new religion with the old, and from 1524 was one of the leaders of the reformed faith in Strassburg. He took a prominent part in the earlier ecclesiastical transactions of the 16th century, was present at the second conference of Zürich and at the conference of Marburg, and along with Martin Bucer drew up the Confessio Tetrapolitana.

Capito was always more concerned for the "unity of the spirit" than for dogmatic formularies, and from his endeavours to conciliate the Lutheran and Zwinglian parties in regard to the sacraments, he seems to have incurred the suspicions of his own friends; while from his intimacy with Martin Cellarius and other divines of the Socinian school he drew on himself the charge of Arianism.

In 1532 Capito married Wibrandis Rosenblatt, the widow of Oecolampadius, who after his death married Martin Bucer.

His principal works were:

  • Institutionum Hebraicarum libri duo;
  • Enarrationes in Habacuc et Hoseam Prophetas;
  • a life of Oecolampadius and an account of the synod of Berne (1532);
  • a Greek version of the Iliad in which he refers to himself as volfivs cephalaevs or wolfius cephalaeus

[edit] References




Product Results (view all...)

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 



↑ top of page ↑about thumbshots