Johann Nepomuk Brischar

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Johann_Nepomuk_Brischar an entity of type: Thing

Johann Nepomuk Brischar (* 22. August 1819 in Horb; † 11. April 1897 in Bühl) war ein deutscher katholischer Kirchenhistoriker. rdf:langString
Johann Nepomuk Brischar or Johann Nepomucene Brischar (22 August 1819, Horb, Württemberg – 11 April 1897, Bühl) was a Roman Catholic church historian. Brischar studied theology at the University of Tübingen and was appointed parish priest of Bühl near Rottenburg in 1853, where he died in 1897. His principal work is the continuation of Count Friedrich Leopold zu Stolberg's History of the Religion of Jesus Christ, of which he wrote volumes forty-five to fifty-four, bringing the history up to 1245 CE. His share of the work does not reach the high standard of his great predecessor. He is also the author of a work in two volumes on the controversies between Paolo Sarpi and Pallavicini, and of a monograph on Pope Innocent III. His Catholic Pulpit Orators of Germany in five volumes was published rdf:langString
rdf:langString Johann Nepomuk Brischar
rdf:langString Johann Nepomuk Brischar
xsd:integer 11611436
xsd:integer 977421827
rdf:langString Johann Nepomuk Brischar (* 22. August 1819 in Horb; † 11. April 1897 in Bühl) war ein deutscher katholischer Kirchenhistoriker.
rdf:langString Johann Nepomuk Brischar or Johann Nepomucene Brischar (22 August 1819, Horb, Württemberg – 11 April 1897, Bühl) was a Roman Catholic church historian. Brischar studied theology at the University of Tübingen and was appointed parish priest of Bühl near Rottenburg in 1853, where he died in 1897. His principal work is the continuation of Count Friedrich Leopold zu Stolberg's History of the Religion of Jesus Christ, of which he wrote volumes forty-five to fifty-four, bringing the history up to 1245 CE. His share of the work does not reach the high standard of his great predecessor. He is also the author of a work in two volumes on the controversies between Paolo Sarpi and Pallavicini, and of a monograph on Pope Innocent III. His Catholic Pulpit Orators of Germany in five volumes was published in Schaffhausen in the years 1866-71. He contributed many articles to Herder's Kirchenlexicon.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 1901

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