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Marcus Marulus or Marko Maruliæ (1450-1524) is known as the Father of Croatian Literature and as the first Croatian Bible scholar. Much of his literary work is inspired by his study of the Sacred Scriptures. This book is an introduction to Marulus' central religious matrix, the Latin Bible, and his use of it. We are fortunate to have access to Marulus' desk copy of the Biblia Latina in four volumes, with introductions and commentaries that customarily accompanied the Bibles in the fifteenth century. This book is the first ever to investigate Marulus' biblical hermeneutics, and it lays the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Marcus Marulus or Marko Maruliæ (1450-1524) is known as the Father of Croatian Literature and as the first Croatian Bible scholar. Much of his literary work is inspired by his study of the Sacred Scriptures. This book is an introduction to Marulus' central religious matrix, the Latin Bible, and his use of it. We are fortunate to have access to Marulus' desk copy of the Biblia Latina in four volumes, with introductions and commentaries that customarily accompanied the Bibles in the fifteenth century. This book is the first ever to investigate Marulus' biblical hermeneutics, and it lays the groundwork for further literary and theological studies on Marulus and his time. The book is accompanied by a DVD of the four volumes of the Biblia Latina of 1489 with Marulus' handwritten marginalia.
Autorenporträt
Dr. Franz Posset, German-American independent scholar of historical theology, holds a Diplom in Catholic Theology from the University of Tübingen and a PhD in Religious Studies from Marquette University in Milwaukee, USA. He is an internationally known scholar of Reformation theology and history, and a regular contributor to Colloquia Maruliana. His publications include Pater Bernhardus: Martin Luther and Bernard of Clairvaux (1999), The Front-Runner of the Catholic Reformation: The Life and Works of Johann von Staupitz (2003), Renaissance Monks (2005), and The Real Luther: A Friar at Erfurt and Wittenberg (2011). He is the winner of the first annual Natalie Zemon Davis Prize (Canada) for superb scholarship for his contribution: «Polyglot Humanism in Germany circa 1520 as Luther's Milieu and MatrixÂ" (2006).