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Johann Alexander Brassicanus : ウィキペディア英語版 | Johann Alexander Brassicanus Johann Alexander Brassicanus (c.1500 – 25 November 1539) was a German Catholic humanist, author and prominent professor. ==Family and early life== He was born probably at Cannstatt, 1500, as a member of an ancient family of Konstanz, named Köl or Köll, Latinized Brassicanus〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Johann Alexander Brassicanus )〕 (both meaning 'cabbage'), his father was Johannes Brassicanus, the Württemberg humanist who taught in the Latin school at Urach up to 1508, and later in the pedagogium at Tübingen, but was chiefly known as a leader in the movement for the promotion of the humanities and as the author of a grammar then widely used, "Institutiones grammaticae", thirteen editions of which were issued between 1508 and 1519. From his father, who died at Wildaad in 1514, Johann Alexander received an excellent education, which brought his intellectual powers to at early maturity, enabling him to matriculate at the University of Tübingen 13 January 1514 and take his degree as Master of Arts in 1517. His younger brother was Johann Ludwig Brassicanus, an advisor to the Habsburgs.
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