{"title":"约翰·劳伦提斯·鲍什和莱文海姆的菲利普·雅各布·萨克斯。自然学会基金会[j]。","authors":"Uwe Müller","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The biographical notes of the two municipal physicians of Schweinfurt, Leonhard Bausch (1574 to 1636) and Johann Laurentius Bausch (1605-1665) and another three physicians (Johann Michael Fehr, Georg Balthasar Wohlfarth and Georg Balthasar Metzger) who founded the Academia Naturae Curiosorum together with the younger Bausch in 1652, show that this founding was initiated by a surprisingly homogenous group, sharing the same social, educational and professional background as well as ancestral and acquired experiences. They all had been influenced by the immigration fate of their families, the rapid rise to the politically or academically educated elite in the imperial city of Schweinfurt, worn out by war and plagues. They all had studied at universities in protestant territories of the Holy Roman Empire, finishing with an educational journey (peregrinatio academica), usually to Italy. Experience of the flourishing university life beyond the frontiers of the Holy Roman Empire laid waste by the \"Teutsche Krieg\", the great variety of academies in Italy, the narrowness of contemporary medicine and the inability of the individual to explore the immense variety of nature: all this leads to the founding of the Academia Naturae Curiosorum and it is the point of reference of the founding documents of 1651/1652, which were first printed in 1662 (Salve Academicum). What is innovative about this is not the establishment of an academy but the desired aim and the way of achieving this. The tenor of these documents--to medically explore the variety of the divine \"res naturals\" in a cooperative and regulated way for the benefit of medicine and mankind and to publish the results in monographes (utilitas by curiositas)--was condensed by the later Leopoldina to the still used motto \"to explore nature for the benefit of mankind\". Due to Breslau's municipal physician Philipp Jacob Sachs von Lewenhaimb (1627 - 1672) the publishing activities of the academy came into being. But before the death of BAUSCH only three titles could be published ad normam et formam Academiae Naturae Curiosorum in the context of the work programme: Sachs' Ampelographia (1661), Gammarologia (1665) and Bausch's Haematite et Aetite (1665). The way to international exchange, essentially created by SACHS, led to a new definition of academic tasks by critically reflecting other models (London, Paris, and Florence). Out of this reform process emerged the new Leges with 21 paragraphs (published in 1671). The new concept focussed on the issue of the journal exclusively for medicine and natural science as well as the striving for imperial recognition and privileges. The first volume of the Ephemerides could be presented in 1670: Miscellanea curiosa medico-physica Academiae Naturae Curiosorum sive Ephemeridum medico-physicarum Germanicarum curiosarum annus primus. The new journal, which is still published today under the title Nova Acta Leopoldina, represented the way to a successful future without completely abandoning the original concept of monographes. The imperial privileges (confirmation as imperial academy, confirmation of Leges, privilege to ban reprints) could be achieved in 1677. The privilege of Emperor Leopold I. of 7 August 1687 finally brought the academy, 35 years after it was founded, a coat of arms and imperial title--Sacri Romani Imperii Academia Caesareo-Leopoldina Naturae Curiosorum. President and Director Ephemeridum and their successors were raised to imperial personal physicians and nobility, combined with the title and rights of palatinate court (\"Hofpfalzgrafen\"), which also included the right to award doctorates.</p>","PeriodicalId":7006,"journal":{"name":"Acta historica Leopoldina","volume":" 49","pages":"13-41"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2008-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"[Johann Laurentius Bausch and Philipp Jacob Sachs of Lewenhaimb. 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They all had studied at universities in protestant territories of the Holy Roman Empire, finishing with an educational journey (peregrinatio academica), usually to Italy. Experience of the flourishing university life beyond the frontiers of the Holy Roman Empire laid waste by the \\\"Teutsche Krieg\\\", the great variety of academies in Italy, the narrowness of contemporary medicine and the inability of the individual to explore the immense variety of nature: all this leads to the founding of the Academia Naturae Curiosorum and it is the point of reference of the founding documents of 1651/1652, which were first printed in 1662 (Salve Academicum). What is innovative about this is not the establishment of an academy but the desired aim and the way of achieving this. The tenor of these documents--to medically explore the variety of the divine \\\"res naturals\\\" in a cooperative and regulated way for the benefit of medicine and mankind and to publish the results in monographes (utilitas by curiositas)--was condensed by the later Leopoldina to the still used motto \\\"to explore nature for the benefit of mankind\\\". Due to Breslau's municipal physician Philipp Jacob Sachs von Lewenhaimb (1627 - 1672) the publishing activities of the academy came into being. But before the death of BAUSCH only three titles could be published ad normam et formam Academiae Naturae Curiosorum in the context of the work programme: Sachs' Ampelographia (1661), Gammarologia (1665) and Bausch's Haematite et Aetite (1665). The way to international exchange, essentially created by SACHS, led to a new definition of academic tasks by critically reflecting other models (London, Paris, and Florence). Out of this reform process emerged the new Leges with 21 paragraphs (published in 1671). The new concept focussed on the issue of the journal exclusively for medicine and natural science as well as the striving for imperial recognition and privileges. The first volume of the Ephemerides could be presented in 1670: Miscellanea curiosa medico-physica Academiae Naturae Curiosorum sive Ephemeridum medico-physicarum Germanicarum curiosarum annus primus. The new journal, which is still published today under the title Nova Acta Leopoldina, represented the way to a successful future without completely abandoning the original concept of monographes. The imperial privileges (confirmation as imperial academy, confirmation of Leges, privilege to ban reprints) could be achieved in 1677. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
施魏因富特的两位市立医生Leonhard Bausch(1574 - 1636)和Johann Laurentius Bausch(1655 -1665)以及另外三位医生(Johann Michael Fehr, Georg Balthasar Wohlfarth和Georg Balthasar Metzger)的传记笔记表明,1652年,他们与年轻的Bausch一起创立了自然博物馆,这一创立是由一个令人惊讶的同质化群体发起的,他们拥有相同的社会背景,教育和专业背景以及祖传和后天经验。他们都受到家族移民命运的影响,在战争和瘟疫的摧残下,在帝国城市施魏因富特迅速崛起为政治或学术精英。他们都曾在神圣罗马帝国新教领土上的大学学习,最后进行一次教育之旅(peregrinatio academica),通常是去意大利。在神圣罗马帝国边界之外,繁荣的大学生活经历被“德意志战争”、意大利各种各样的学院、当代医学的狭隘和个人无法探索大自然的巨大多样性所破坏:所有这些都导致了自然博物馆的成立,它是1651/1652年创始文件的参考点,这些文件于1662年首次印刷(Salve Academicum)。创新之处不在于学院的建立,而在于期望的目标和实现这一目标的方式。这些文件的主旨是,为了医学和人类的利益,以合作和规范的方式在医学上探索各种神圣的“自然之物”,并将结果发表在专著中(utilitas by curiositas),后来的利奥波迪纳将其浓缩为至今仍在使用的座右铭“为人类的利益探索自然”。由于布雷斯劳的市立医生菲利普·雅各布·萨克斯·冯·列文海姆(1627 - 1672),学院的出版活动应运而生。但在鲍什去世之前,在工作计划的背景下,只有三种书籍可以正常出版:萨克斯的《Ampelographia》(1661),《Gammarologia》(1665)和鲍什的《Haematite et Aetite》(1665)。国际交流的方式主要是由萨克斯创造的,通过批判性地反映其他模式(伦敦、巴黎和佛罗伦萨),导致了对学术任务的新定义。在这一改革过程中出现了21段的新法律(出版于1671年)。这个新概念的重点是专门为医学和自然科学出版的杂志,以及争取帝国的承认和特权。《星历集》的第一卷于1670年出版:《医物理学院集》(Miscellanea Curiosorum);《医物理学院集》(Miscellanea Curiosorum);这份新杂志至今仍以Nova Acta Leopoldina的名字出版,它代表了一条通往成功未来的道路,同时又没有完全放弃原来的专著概念。1677年,帝国特权(被确认为翰林院、被确认为御师、被禁止再版的特权)得以实现。1687年8月7日,利奥波德一世皇帝授予学院特权,在学院成立35年后,终于获得了一枚徽章和帝国头衔——Sacri Romani Imperii Academia Caesareo-Leopoldina Naturae Curiosorum。院长和院长Ephemeridum和他们的继任者被提升为皇家私人医生和贵族,并结合了普法尔茨宫廷的头衔和权利(“hopffalzgrafen”),其中还包括授予博士学位的权利。
[Johann Laurentius Bausch and Philipp Jacob Sachs of Lewenhaimb. Foundation of the Academia Naturae]].
The biographical notes of the two municipal physicians of Schweinfurt, Leonhard Bausch (1574 to 1636) and Johann Laurentius Bausch (1605-1665) and another three physicians (Johann Michael Fehr, Georg Balthasar Wohlfarth and Georg Balthasar Metzger) who founded the Academia Naturae Curiosorum together with the younger Bausch in 1652, show that this founding was initiated by a surprisingly homogenous group, sharing the same social, educational and professional background as well as ancestral and acquired experiences. They all had been influenced by the immigration fate of their families, the rapid rise to the politically or academically educated elite in the imperial city of Schweinfurt, worn out by war and plagues. They all had studied at universities in protestant territories of the Holy Roman Empire, finishing with an educational journey (peregrinatio academica), usually to Italy. Experience of the flourishing university life beyond the frontiers of the Holy Roman Empire laid waste by the "Teutsche Krieg", the great variety of academies in Italy, the narrowness of contemporary medicine and the inability of the individual to explore the immense variety of nature: all this leads to the founding of the Academia Naturae Curiosorum and it is the point of reference of the founding documents of 1651/1652, which were first printed in 1662 (Salve Academicum). What is innovative about this is not the establishment of an academy but the desired aim and the way of achieving this. The tenor of these documents--to medically explore the variety of the divine "res naturals" in a cooperative and regulated way for the benefit of medicine and mankind and to publish the results in monographes (utilitas by curiositas)--was condensed by the later Leopoldina to the still used motto "to explore nature for the benefit of mankind". Due to Breslau's municipal physician Philipp Jacob Sachs von Lewenhaimb (1627 - 1672) the publishing activities of the academy came into being. But before the death of BAUSCH only three titles could be published ad normam et formam Academiae Naturae Curiosorum in the context of the work programme: Sachs' Ampelographia (1661), Gammarologia (1665) and Bausch's Haematite et Aetite (1665). The way to international exchange, essentially created by SACHS, led to a new definition of academic tasks by critically reflecting other models (London, Paris, and Florence). Out of this reform process emerged the new Leges with 21 paragraphs (published in 1671). The new concept focussed on the issue of the journal exclusively for medicine and natural science as well as the striving for imperial recognition and privileges. The first volume of the Ephemerides could be presented in 1670: Miscellanea curiosa medico-physica Academiae Naturae Curiosorum sive Ephemeridum medico-physicarum Germanicarum curiosarum annus primus. The new journal, which is still published today under the title Nova Acta Leopoldina, represented the way to a successful future without completely abandoning the original concept of monographes. The imperial privileges (confirmation as imperial academy, confirmation of Leges, privilege to ban reprints) could be achieved in 1677. The privilege of Emperor Leopold I. of 7 August 1687 finally brought the academy, 35 years after it was founded, a coat of arms and imperial title--Sacri Romani Imperii Academia Caesareo-Leopoldina Naturae Curiosorum. President and Director Ephemeridum and their successors were raised to imperial personal physicians and nobility, combined with the title and rights of palatinate court ("Hofpfalzgrafen"), which also included the right to award doctorates.