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  1. Johann Cochlaeus, (Wendelstein, 10 de janeiro de 1479 – Breslau, 11 de janeiro de 1552) foi um teólogo e humanista alemão.

  2. Johann Cochlaeus (Cochläus) (1479 – 10 January 1552) was a German humanist, music theorist, and controversialist. Life. Originally Johann Dobneck, he was born of poor parents at Wendelstein (near Nuremberg ), from which he obtained the punning surname Cochlaeus, [1] for which he occasionally substituted Wendelstinus.

  3. Johannes Cochlaeus was a German Humanist and a leading Roman Catholic opponent of Martin Luther. Educated at the University of Cologne (1504–10), Cochlaeus became rector of the Latin School of St. Lawrence, Nürnberg (1510–15), where he published several textbooks that notably improved instructional.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Johannes Cochlaeus stands among the prominent members of the Catholic reaction to the Reformation during its first three decades. His work serves as valuable evidence for scholars of the division of western Christianity that took place in the sixteenth century.

  5. Priest, humanist, theologian, and opponent of Luther; b. Wendelstein, near Nuremberg, 1479; d. Breslau, Jan. 10, 1552. He came of peasant origin. He studied humanism first at Nuremberg and then more intensively at the University of Cologne (1504 – 07) with Ulrich Von hutten.

  6. Johann Cochlaeus, (Wendelstein, 10 de janeiro de 1479 – Breslau, 11 de janeiro de 1552) foi um teólogo e humanista alemão.

  7. Johann Cochlæus. (Properly Dobeneck), surnamed Cochlæus (from cochlea, a snail shell) after his birthplace Wendelstein, near Schwabach. Humanist and Catholic controversialist, b. 1479; d. 11 Jan., 1552, in Breslau. His early education he received at the house of his uncle, Hirspeck.