De gekheydt der wereldt

750,00

Abraham van St. Clara (= Ulrich Megerle)‎‎De gekheydt der wereldt, wysselyk beschreven .. in honderd narren en derselver narren poetzen : alom doormengd met aardige historien, vrolyke verdigtzelen, en zedelyke vermaningen.

Dutch 2 parts. ‎First part. ‎Amsterdam, Janssoons Van Waesberge, 1718. With 25 engravings, generally in good condition. Title page somewhat dirty, some signs of wear. Original leather strap, somewhat loose. With: idem: The Geheyt der Wereldt .. Second part. A’dam (Gerrit Tielenburg) 1743. With 25 engravings (numbered 26-50), generally in good condition. Original leather strap, gold-plated spine. Both parts rarely found together.

1 in stock

Description

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Abraham a Sancta Clara (July 2, 1644 – December 1, 1709) was an Augustinian friar. He was born Johann Ulrich Megerle, in Kreenheinstetten, Germany. He was described as “a very eccentric but popular Augustinian monk”. His antisemitism has been noted to have had an influence on political antisemitism including supporters of Nazism, including Heidegger. In 1662, Abraham a Sancta Clara joined the Catholic religious order of Discalced Augustinians, and assumed the name by which he is known. In this order, he rose to become definitor and prior provincial of his province. He gained a great reputation for pulpit eloquence early on. He was appointed imperial court preacher of Vienna in 1669. The people flocked to hear him, attracted by the force and simplicity of his language, the grotesqueness of his humour, and the impartial severity with which he lashed the follies of all social classes. The predominant quality of his style was an overflowing and often coarse wit. Many passages in his sermons offer loftier thoughts and more dignified language. In his published writings, he displayed many of the same qualities as in the pulpit, shown best through the most notable specimen of his style, his didactic novel entitled Judas der Erzschelm (4 vols., Salzburg, 1686–1695). His work has been several times reproduced in whole or in part, though infected with spurious interpolations.He died in Vienna in December, 1709, after 65 years.

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