Matthäus Dresser, (also: Matteaus, Matthaei; Dressler, Drescher, Dresserus, Dresseri) (24 August 1536 in Erfurt – 5 October 1607 in Leipzig)[1] was a Lutheran German humanist, pedagogue, philosopher, and historian.
Education and career
Dresser attended school in Erfurt and Eisleben, and later studied at the University or Erfurt, where he attended lectures by Martin Seidemann.[2] In Erfurt, records of Dresser go back to 1559, where he earned a Masters of Philosophy. In 1560, he learned Biblical Hebrew during his university studies. When the Protestant Council Grammar School of Erfurt [de] began construction in 1561, Dresser participated in the founding of the University, where he became a professor of Greek Literature.[3] Dressner aspired to attend the University of Wittenberg, but was unable to do so due to illness at the time.[4]
Dresser was married twice in his life. His first marriage was to Juliana Sarcerius, daughter of Lutheran theologian and disciple Erasmus Sarcerius. He was, by that relation, brother in law to Zacharias Praetorius. After the death of Juliana, Dresser married Maria Cordes, the daughter of the prepositus at Leipzig University, M. Henricus Cordes.[4] He did not produce progeny in either marriage. Dresser died of Malaria on October 7, 1607, and was buried at the Paulinerkirche.[8]
Selected bibliography
Oratio isocratis Rhetoris Atheniensis disertissimi, eleganter disserens de officio Magistratus erga subditos et subditorum erga Magistratur etc., conversa e Graeco in Latinum (1558)
Rhetorica, inventionis, dispositionis et elocutionis illustrata et locuplctata quam plurimis exemplis sacris et philosophicis (1570)
M. T. Ciceronis de Natura Deorum libri III cum argumentis, oeconomia, et rerum verborumque accur. et artif. enodatione; additae sunt ad finem cujusque libri disputatione etc. (1572)
Gymnasmatum linguae graecae libri III orationum, epistolarum et carminum exempla sacra et profana complectentes. (1574)[9]
De disciplina nova et veteri tam domestica quam scholastica (1577)[10]
Elocutionis rhetoricae doctrina, praeceptis et exemplis cum sacris tum philosophicis exposita et locupletata (1580)[11]
Oratio de dialectica Philippi Melanchthonis (1580)[12]
Catechismus Parvus D. Martini Lutheri, cum scholis et nonnullis textibus biblicis de festis anni, Item precationibus scholasticis (1581)
Oratio de IV monarchiis sive summis imperiis a Daniele propheta expressis (1581)[13]
De diebus festis Christianorum, Judaeorum et Ethnicorum liber (1584)[14]
Querela de Pontificiis insidiis per Germaniam (1584)[15]
De ordine et progressu professionis suac Lipsiensis (1585)
Orationes Matthaei Dresseri, Tam Rerum varietate et copia quam sermonis puritate et elegantia commendate (1587)[17]
Orationes duae de Dialectica Phil. Melanthonis (1588)
Narratio de statu Ecclcsiae et Religionis in Persico regno (1589)[18]
Confutatio commentitiae opinionis Rob. Bellamini de translatioie Imp. Rom. a Graecis ad Romanos, institutioneque septemvirorum electoralium per Pontif. (1592)[19]
De Christiano inclyto et magnanimo duce electore: Oratio funebris habita en academia (1592)[20]
Oratio De vita et morte D. Pauli Lutheri Medici (1593)[21]
Explicatio ad Rudolphum II. Imp. Rom. historica dicti seu vaticinii cujusdam Lactantii de delendo noraine Romano in terris et transferendo imperio occid. in orientem (1593)[22]
Oratio De Bello Turcico: ex rationibus et historiis depromta, et ad acuendos Christianos hoc tempore accommodata (1593)[23]
Oratio De cancellarii munere et dignitate tam in regnis et ducatibus, quam in Academia Lipsiensi (1594)[24]
Die kleine fürstliche Chronica, durch Kasper Sturm, contin. bis aufs Jahr Chr. 1596 (1596)
^ abcHistorische Commission bei der königl. Akademie der Wissenschaften (1877), "Dresser, Matthäus", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, Bd. 5, Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (1. ed.), München/Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, p. 398, retrieved 2023-02-24