9 October 1580 A.D. John Immanuel Tremellius Dies—Italian Reformed Churchman, Hebraist, Resident at Lambeth Palace, & Professor at Cambridge and Heidelberg Universities
Underhile, Andy. “Obscure Heroes of the
Reformation—Tremellius.” Contra Mundum. 7 Sept 2011. http://andycontramundum.blogspot.com/2011/09/obscure-heroes-of-reformation.html. Accessed 17 Jul 2014.
Obscure Heroes of the Reformation - Tremellius
Immanuel Tremellius was born in
Ferrara. His father was a Jew and educated him very skillfully in the Hebrew
language. He came under the ministry of Peter Martyr and was soon converted. He
went with Martyr to Lucca, where he taught Hebrew.
He went with Martyr to Strasberg and
then to England during the reign of Edward VI. Upon Edward’s death, he returned
to Germany and in the school of Hornbach, he taught Hebrew.
He was later sent to Heidelberg to
be the professor of Hebrew. He translated the Syriac New Testament into Latin.
He also set about to translate the Old Testament from the Hebrew and was thus
associated with the work of Francis Junius.
Late in life, he was called upon by
the duke of Bouillon to be the professor of Hebrew at the newly built
university in Sedan. Tremellius remained faithful at this post until his death
at the age of 70, in the year 1580.
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