CRUCIGER (CREUZIGER, CREUTZINGER),
KASPAR: The name of two German theologians.
1. Kaspar Cruciger the Elder: Luther's secretary
and collaborator; b. at Leipsic Jan. 1, 1504; d. at
Wittenberg Nov. 16, 1548. In 1513 he
matriculated at Leipsic, where he heard the disputation
between Eck and Luther. In 1521 he
matriculated in theology at Wittenberg, and studied also
mathematics and botany. In 1525 he became
rector of St. John's School and pastor at
Magdeburg, but in 1528 he returned to Wittenberg as
professor of theology and minister at the Schlosskirche,
where he remained with a few intermissions until
his death. He assisted Luther in his translation
of the Bible, gave instruction when Melanchthon
and others were called away, and participated in
theological debates and conferences. His most
important public service was connected with the
establishment of the Reformation in Leipsic (1539),
which he carried through with the help of Myconius.
The city council tried to keep him there, but Luther
declared him indispensable to Wittenberg. The
Schmalkald war and the Interim embittered his
last years. He wrote exegetical and dogmatic
works, most of which were published after his death.
He had a knowledge of shorthand and thus
preserved many of Luther's sermons. With Georg
Rorer he edited the first volumes of the
Wittenberg edition of Luther's Works (1539 sqq.).
2. Kaspar Cruciger the Younger: Melanchthon's
successor at Wittenberg, son of the elder Kaspar
Cruciger; b. at Wittenberg Mar. 19, 1525; d. at
Cassel Apr. 16, 1597. In the discussions after
1570 he was one of the leaders of the Philippists,
and was engulfed in their catastrophe in 1574.
He was imprisoned and was banished from Saxony
in 1576. After a short residence with the count
of Nassau at Dillenberg he went to Hesse, and died
as pastor and president of the consistory at Cassel.
(FERDINAND COHRS.)
BIBLIOGRAPHY; For 1. CR, xi. 833-841; O. G. Schmidt.
Caspar Crueigers Leben, Leipsic, 1862; T. Pressel, Caspar
Cruciger, Elberfeld, 1862; J. Kostlin, Martin Luther, 2
vols., Berlin, 1903. For 2. G. J. Planck,
Geschichte der
Entstehung . . . protestantischen Lehrbegriffs, V. ii. 626
sqq., Leipsic, 1799; H. Heppe, Geschichte des deutschen
Protestantismus, ii. 312 sqq., Marburg, 1853.
CRUDEN, ALEXANDER:
The author of "Cruden's
Concordance "; b. at Aberdeen May 31, 1701;
d. in London Nov. 1, 1770. He studied at
Marischal College, Aberdeen, and took the degree of M.A.
(year not known). Indications of an unsound
mind, from which he suffered more or less all his
life, soon became evident and he was in
confinement for a short time. In 1722 he went to London
and found employment as tutor in Hertfordshire
and the Isle of Man till 1732, when he opened a
bookseller's shop in London, also acting as corrector
of the press. He began the
Concordance in 1736
and issued it the following year in quarto. It was
not a success pecuniarily; he lost his business,
suffered another attack of insanity, and was again
put in an asylum. After a few weeks he escaped
and in Mar., 1739, issued a curious pamphlet relating
to his confinement, with the title
The London-Citizen exceedingly Injured, or a British
Inquisition Displayed.
He instituted proceedings for
damages, pleaded his own cause (unsuccessfully),
and published a report of the trial dedicated to
King George II. He was again in confinement
for a short time in 1753. In 1754 he became proof
reader for the
Public Advertiser (daily newspaper);
at the same time he was busy as general corrector
of the press and labored diligently in revising the
Concordance. The hard and regular work seems
to have been beneficial to his health, and it was not
necessary to send him again to the asylum. He
supervised the printing of an edition of Matthew
Henry's
Commentary, and published a
Compendium of the Holy Bible, . . Designed for Making
the Reading more Easy (1750); he compiled a
Scripture Dictionary,
which was published in two
volumes at Aberdeen shortly after his death; it is
said also that he wrote prefaces for many books,
and he prepared the verbal index for Bishop
Newton's edition of Milton (1749). He issued second
and third editions of the
Concordance in 1761 and
1769, and received considerable profit from them.
The explanations of Scripture terms (omitted in
some editions) were published separately by the
Religious Tract Society (1840); they are strongly
Calvinistic. Many stories are told of Cruden's
eccentricities. He thought himself divinely
appointed as the public censor, especially in regard
to swearing and Sabbath keeping, and took the
title " Alexander the Corrector." He went about
London with a sponge, erasing obscene words on
walls and other things which did not meet with
his approval. He appeared as candidate for par
liament in 1754, applied for knighthood, sought to
marry the daughter of the Lord Mayor of London,
and paid unwelcome and embarrassing addresses to
other young ladies. To promote his schemes he
issued several extraordinary pamphlets. But not
withstanding all this he was kind-hearted,
benevolent, fearless in the discharge of duty, a useful
citizen, and a humble, devout Christian; and he
was honored and respected where he was fully
known. He was a member of an independent
church in London. He gives much information
about himself in his pamphlets, particularly the
three which he called
The Adventures of Alexander the Corrector
(1754-55).
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
His life by Alexander Chalmers, written for
the
Biographia Britannica (1789),
was reprinted in the
5th edition of the concordance; a memoir by Samuel
Blackburn was prepared for the first octavo edition
(1823); another by William Youngman is found in some
editions. Consult DNB, xii. 249-251.