Jakob Bidermann

Jakob BIDERMANN

Jakob Bidermann.
Born in 1578 in Ehingen, Further Austria.
Died on 20 August 1639 in Rome.
Wikipedia: English, French, German.

THEATRE

Cenodoxus (tragicomedy, 1602).
Latin: 1666, 1666.
English: Cenodoxus (Deny George Dyer, Cecily Longrigg, 1975).
German: Cenodoxus (Joachim Meichel, 1635).

Cassianus (1602, lost).

Belisarius (tragicomedy, 1607).
Latin: 1666, 1666.

Macarius Romanus (comedy, 1613).
Latin: 1666, 1666.

Josephus Ægypti prorex (comedy, 1615).
(Joseph, Vice-King of Egypt.)
Latin: 1666, 1666.

Cosmarchia (comedy, 1617).
Latin: 1666, 1666.
English: Cosmarchia (Thomas W. Best, 1991).
German: Cosmarchia (Helga Nehrkorn, 1973).

Philemon martyr (comedy, 1618).
Latin: 1666, 1666.
German: Philemon, der fröhliche Märtyrer (Bernt von Heiseler, 1958, 1962);
Philemon martyr (Max Wehrli, 1960).

Joannes Calybita (comedy, 1618).
(John Calybite.)
Latin: 1666, 1666.

Josaphatus rex (drama, 1619).
(King Josaphat.)
Latin: 1666, 1666.

Jacobus usurarius (tragicomedy).
(Jacob the Usurer.)
Latin: 1666, 1666.

Stertinius proscriptus (drama).
(Stertinius Proscribed.)
Latin: 1666, 1666.

 The lost tragedy Adrianus martyr performed in Munich in 1606 and formerly ascribed to Jakob Bidermann was written by Kaspar Rhey.

POEMS

Epigrammata (1620).
(Epigrams.)
Latin: 1620, 1620, 1621, 1621, 1621, 1623, 1631, 1633.

Herodias (1622).
(Herodiad.)
Epic poem on the Massacre of the Innocents.
Latin: 1622, 1622, 1622, 1635.

Heroum epistolæ (1633).
(Epistles of Heroes.)
Latin: 1633, 1634, 1634.
German: Helden Schreiben (Georg Franz Friebel, 1704).

Silvulæ hendecasyllaborum (1634).
(Groves.)
Latin: 1634, 1647, 1647.

Heroidum epistolæ (1638).
(Epistles of Heroines.)
Latin: 1642, 1642, 1642.
German: Heldin Schreiben (Georg Franz Friebel, 1704).

NARRATIVE WORKS

Ignatius (1612).
Latin translation of Pedro de Ribadeneyra’s 1583 Spanish translation of his own biography in Latin of Ignatius of Loyola published in 1572.
Latin: 1612 (1st edition), 1612 (2nd edition), 1615, 1621, 1622, 1625.

Ubaldinus (1633).
Biography of Antonio Maria Ubaldini (1611-1629).
Latin: 1633, 1633, 1634.
French: Ubaldin, comte de Montée (Guillaume Bénard, adaptation, 1656);
La Vie d’Antoine-Marie Ubaldin (Paul Le Clerc, translation, 1690, ed. 1701).
Italian: Vita del conte Antonio Maria Ubaldini (anonymous, 1633).

Deliciæ sacræ (1637).
(Sacred Delights.)
Latin: 1637, 1637.

Utopia (novel, 1640).
Latin: 1640, 1640, 1640.
German: Utopia (Margrit Schuster, 1984).

Acroamata academicorum (1641).
(Academic Entertainments.)
Latin: 1642, 1654, 1664.

ESSAYS

Corollaria tria ex principio logico ducta (January 1617).
Latin: 1617, 1617.

Corollaria sex e definitione scientiæ ducta (September 1617).
Latin: 1617.

Corollaria tria e subjecto scientiæ physicæ deprompta (January 1618).
Latin: 1618, 1618.

Corollaria sex de physico extenso (April 1618).
Latin: 1618, 1618.

Corollaria quatuor de physico locato (June 1618).
Latin: 1618, 1618.

Corollaria tria de physico animato in specie (August 1618).
Latin: 1618, 1618.

Corollaria quatuor de physico animato in genere (August 1618).
Latin: 1618, 1618.

Corollaria quinque de physico intenso (August 1618).
Latin: 1618, 1618.

Theses theologicæ (June 1620).
Latin: 1620.

Sponsalia (May 1621).
Latin: 1621.

Pœnitentiæ sacramentum (June 1621).
Latin: 1621, 1621.

Matrimonii impedimenta (July 1621).
Latin: 1621.

Censuræ (April 1622).
Latin: 1622, 1622.

Irregularitas (June 1622).
Latin: 1622, 1622.

Suffragia (January 1623).
Latin: 1623, 1623.

Prædestinatio (April 1623).
Latin: 1623, 1623 (different editions).

Jesu Christi status triplex, mortalis, immortalis, sacramentalis (June 1623).
Latin: 1623, 1623.

Conscientia (June 1624).
Latin: 1624, 1624.

Prolusiones theologicæ (December 1624).
Latin: 1624, 1624.

Eleemosyna (February 1625).
Latin: 1625, 1625.

Gratia (May 1625).
Latin: 1625, 1625.

Agonisticon (March 1626).
Latin: 1626, 1626.

Created on 14 October 2020. Updated on 18 October 2020.