Department of Comenius Studies and Early Modern Intellectual History

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  • Žluč pod nebesy. Jan Amos Komenský jako melancholik lásky

    Mgr. Matouš Jaluška
    (Ústav pro českou literaturu AV ČR, v. v. i.)

    lecture
    16. 12. 2016 od 14:00
    conference room of CMS
    Jilská 1, Praha 1

    Oddělení pro komeniologii a intelektuální dějiny raného novověku FLÚ AV ČR, v. v. i.

     

    (Faculty of "Artes Liberales", University of Warsaw)

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Department of Comenius Studies and Early Modern Intellectual History

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Two Visionaries in Upper Lusatia: Jacob Böhme and Christoph Kotter

Dr. Leigh Penman
(University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia)

přednáška
24. 11. 2016 od 14:00
zasedací místnost FLÚ
Jilská 1, Praha 1

Oddělení pro komeniologii a intelektuální dějiny raného novověku FLÚ AV ČR, v. v. i.

 

(Faculty of "Artes Liberales", University of Warsaw)

Leigh Penman is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. He is the author of Hope and Heresy: The Problem of Chiliasm in Post-Reformation Lutheranism (forthcoming), and is currently writing a revisionist history of the concept of the cosmopolitan in early modern Europe.

Between 1616 and 1628, the Sprottau tanner Christoph Kotter (1585–1647) experienced an extraordinary sequence of angelic visions while traversing Upper Lusatia and Lower Silesia. Although recent research has shed light on the earliest publications of these visions — including the editorial involvement of Jan Amos Komensk‎ý — we know little about the intellectual environment through which Kotter moved, and Kotter's connections to another contemporary visionary, the Görlitz philosopher Jacob Böhme (1575–1624). Based on intensive prosopographical research concerning Böhme's correspondence networks, this paper presents new manuscript evidence concerning Kotter, his relationship to Böhme, and the earliest readers, patrons, and reception of his prophecies. Additionally, this talk furnishes new perspectives concerning Böhme's readers in Bohemia, as well as Jan Amos Komensk‎ý's (1592–1670) knowledge of Böhme's works.

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