, a learned minister of the reformed church, was born in 1555, at
, a learned minister of the reformed
church, was born in 1555, at Volketswyl, a village in the
canton of Zurich, and died of the plague at Zurich, in
1611. He studied at Geneva and Heidelberg, and after
having exercised the ministerial functions in Germany for
some years, returned to Zurich in 1594, where he was appointed professor of theology. He published many theological, philological, and philosophical works, which are
now forgot, but some of them were highly esteemed in his
day, particularly his “Grammar,
” Zurich, Rhetoric,
” ibid. Catechism
” which was long the only one used at Zurich. He was accounted one of the ablest defenders of
Zuinglius and Calvin. The style of his polemical works
partook of that quaintness which prevailed in controversial
writing for more than a century after his time. The title
of one of his pamphlets will exemplify this, and amuse our
Latin readers “Falco emissus ad capiendum, deplumandum et dilacerandum audaciorem ilium cuculum ubjquitarium, qui nuper ex Jac. Andreae, mali corvi, male ovo,
ab Holdero simplicissima curruca exclusus, eta demoniaco
Bavio Fescenio varii coloris plumis instructus, impetum in
philomelas innocentes facere ceperat,
” Neustadt,