Andreas Angelus

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Epitaph of Andreas Angelus in St. Mary's Church in Strausberg

Andreas Angelus (German name Andreas Engel, 16 November 1561 – 9 August 1598) was a German clergyman, teacher and government inspector, known for his chronicles of the history of the Margraviate of Brandenburg.

Biography

Engel was born in

Berlinisches Gymnasium zum Grauen Kloster
).

On 14 September 1592 he married Sabina, eldest daughter of Jacob Colerus,

church of St. Nicholas in Berlin
, and in the same year was made pastor (and inspector) in his birthplace Strausberg.

From this time he started to write his three works on the history of the Mark Brandenburg, which, although they had Latin titles, were written entirely in German. His principal work was a comprehensive history under the working title Marchia. In about 1593 the first published volume drawn from this work appeared under the title Rerum Marchicarum Breviarum, and two years later a further volume entitled Annales Marchiae Brandenburgicae. Angelus cites some 200 printed works and a further twenty or so, which at that time were available only in manuscript.

He planned a third volume to complete the published history, but he died of the plague on 9 August 1598 and the unfinished manuscript of the third part was burnt by his widow after his death, apparently because of some sort of financial dispute.

Published works

References

  • Reschke, Wolfgang, 2004: Der märkische Chronist und Pfarrer, Andreas Engel, genannt Angelus in 750 Jahre St. Marien zu Strausberg. Strausberg: Freundeskreis St. Marien zu Strausberg e.V.
  • Ribbe, Wolfgang, 1971: Die Aufzeichnungen des Engelbert Wusterwitz. Überlieferung, Edition und Interpretation einer spätmittelalterlichen Quelle zur Geschichte der Mark Brandenburg. Berlin: Colloquium-Verlag (also a dissertation, FU Berlin 1971).
  • Walther, Philipp: Andreas Engel in Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Band 1, pp. 456ff, Band 1. Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1875
  • Catalogue of the Deutschen Nationalbibliothek: Biographical summary (in German)