Page:The Great Didactic of John Amos Comenius (1896).pdf/470

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
456
THE GREAT DIDACTIC

8. Glaum; Wolfstirn.—Of the owners of these names I have been unable to obtain any information.

9. John Valentine Andreæ.—Court-preacher at Stuttgart, where he died in 1654. He was a considerable power in the Church and in the school-room.

10. Janus Cæcilius Frey.—A German physician residing at Paris, where he died of the plague in 1631. On educational questions he wrote several books, remarkable for their sound common-sense.

11. This section is signed with Andreæ’s name, but cannot have been written by him, as in the original Bohemian version of the Great Didactic it appears in a considerably altered form. Possibly the last sentence is quoted from one of Andreæ’s works.

12. Stobæus.—A native of Stobi in Macedonia, where he lived about 500 A.D., and composed an Anthology of extracts from as many as 500 Greek authors.

13. Pittacus of Mitylene.—One of the seven wise men of Greece. Lived about 600 B.C.

14. Sextus Pompeius Festus.—A Roman grammarian who lived towards the end of the fourth century A.D.

15. John Ludovic Vives.—One of the great pedagogues of the sixteenth century. Was born at Valencia in 1492; professed the “Humanities” at Louvain and was afterwards invited by Henry VIII. to England, where he became the tutor of the Princess Mary. His best known works on education are: De ratione studii puerilis epistolæ dua; De tradendis disciplinis sive de institutione Christiana; De institutione fæminæ Christianæ; Introductio ad Sapientiam.

16. Bernhard.—Abbot of Clairvaux in 1115. A man of great ecclesiastical and political influence, and one of the instigators of the Third Crusade.

17. Lactantius.—For some years tutor to a son of the Emperor Constantine. Converted to Christianity in middle life, he wrote a voluminous treatise, Divinarum institutionum libri vii.; a plea for Christianity, intended for pagans who had received a philosophic education. He died about 330 A.D.

18. Matthew Dresser (1536–1607).—Was successively Professor of Greek at Erfurt, Professor of Rhetoric at Jena, Rector of the school at Meissen, and Professor of Greek and Latin at Leipzig.

19. Liebhard Camerarius.—A renowned sixteenth century scholar and editor of the classics. Sympathised with the Reformation and was a friend of Melanchthon’s. Died in 1574.

20. Gulartius.—Nothing appears to be known of this scholar or his works.