Brunfels, Otto
BRUNFELS, OTTO: German humanist and
Reformer. The date of his birth can not be determined;
d. at Bern Nov. 23, 1534. His father was
an artisan at Mainz. At an early age he entered
the Carthusian order, but the spirit of the age soon
drew him out of his convent into the polemics of
the time. At first he was a follower of Hutten,
for whom he broke a lance with Erasmus, and
whose library he used in compiling a small collection
of the writings of Huss, which he published in 1524,
with a dedication to Luther. He served the Reformation
as a preacher, first at Steinheim, and then
at Neuenburg in the Breisgau. When the attitude
of the imperial government made his position there
insecure, he went to Strasburg, where he supported
himself by teaching, wrote against tithes, and
studied medicine. He was a friend of Luther
and also of Carlstadt, but was still more strongly
attracted by Zwingli, whose influence procured
him a medical position at Bern. His importance
lies chiefly in the fact that he was a successful
botanist, and a pioneer in this science for Germany,
with his extensive illustrated Herbarium (Strasburg,
3 vols., 1530–40, translated into German, 2 parts,
1532–37, 2d ed., 1546).
(W. Vogt.)