Wibrandis Rosenblatt
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (May 2015) |
Wibrandis Rosenblatt | |
---|---|
Born | 1504 |
Died | |
Nationality | Swiss |
Occupation | Theologian |
Wibrandis Rosenblatt (1504–1564) was the wife of three major religious reformers, who predeceased her: Johannes Oecolampadius (married, 1528–1531), Wolfgang Capito (married, 1532–1541), and Martin Bucer (married, 1542–1551).
Family life
[edit]Rosenblatt was born in 1504 in Bad Säckingen and raised in Basel.
She first married a young scholar and humanist named Ludwig Keller (married, 1524-1526), with whom she had one daughter. Keller died in 1528, and she married Oecolampadius later that year.[1]
She had three children with Oecolampadius, two of whom died in childhood. After Oecolampadius died in 1531, she married his friend Capito (who was also newly widowed) and moved to Strasbourg.[1] She had five children with Capito, but he and several of their children died in the plague of 1541. Rosenblatt's friend Elisabeth Bucer also died in the same plague, but before she died asked her widowed friend to marry her own husband.[1] Rosenblatt married Bucer in 1542, and had two children with him (they did not survive to adulthood).[1] She joined him in his exile to England in 1549.
She was in all the mother of 11 children, and also cared for other children and relatives in her four husbands' households.
After Bucer died she returned to Basel, where she died of bubonic plague in 1564.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d King, Margaret L. (2008). Teaching Other Voices : Women and Religion in Early Modern Europe. The University of Chicago Press. pp. 141–2. ISBN 9780226436333. OCLC 1058128272.
- Sonja Domröse: Frauen der Reformationszeit. Gelehrt, mutig und glaubensfest. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 2010, ISBN 978-3-525-55012-0.
- Irina Bossart: Wibrandis Rosenblatt (1504–1564) – „euer Diener im Herrn“ oder: Das Wort gewinnt Gestalt im Tun. In: Adelheid M. von Hauff (Hrsg.): Frauen gestalten Diakonie. Band 1: Von der biblischen Zeit bis zum Pietismus (). Kohlhammer Verlag, Stuttgart 2007, ISBN 978-3-17-019570-7, S. 321–336.
- Susanna Burghartz: Wibrandis Rosenblatt – Die Frau der Reformatoren. In: Theologische Zeitschrift. Bd. 60, Nr. 4, 2004, S. 337–349, (Digitalisat (PDF; 105,63 KB)).
- Roland H. Bainton: Frauen der Reformation. Von Katharina von Bora bis Anna Zwingli. 10 Porträts (= Gütersloher Taschenbücher. 1442). 2. Auflage. Gütersloher Verlags-Haus, Gütersloh 1996, ISBN 3-579-01442-0, S. 84–102.
- Ernst Staehelin: Frau Wibrandis. A Woman in the Time of Reformation. Translated by E.L. Miller. Wipf & Stock, Eugene, OR., 2009.
- Ernst Staehelin: Frau Wibrandis. Eine Gestalt aus den Kämpfen der Reformationszeit. Gotthelf-Verlag, Bern u. a. 1934.
- Heinze, Rudolph (2006). "Chapter 11: Women and the Reformation: The Marriages of Wibrandis Rosenblatt". Reform and Conflict. Baker History of the Church. Vol. 4. Monarch Books. pp. 289–292. ISBN 978-1-85424-690-5.
External links
[edit]- Literature by and about Wibrandis Rosenblatt in the German National Library catalogue
- Susanna Burghartz: Rosenblatt, Wibrandis in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
- Susanna Burghartz: Wibrandis Rosenblatt – Die Frau der Reformatoren. Zum Andenken an Katharina Preiswerk (1917-2003). ThZ 4/60 (2004), S. 337–349 [1]
- Helen Liebendörfer: Die Frau im Hintergrund. Historischer Roman. F. Reinhardt, Basel 2013, ISBN 978-3-7245-1875-4.