- Sebastian Brant
Sebastian Brant (also Brandt) (1457 –
May 10 ,1521 ), Alsatian humanist andsatirist , was born in Strasbourg.He studied at Basel, took the degree of doctor of law in 1489, and for some time held a professorship of
jurisprudence there. Returning to Strasbourg, he was madesyndic of the town, remaining there for the rest of his life.He first attracted attention in humanistic circles by his
Latin poetry , and edited many ecclesiastical and legal works; but he is now only known by his famous satire, "Das Narrenschiff " (1494), the popularity and influence of which were not limited to Germany. Under the form of anallegory , a ship laden with fools and steered by fools goes to the fools' paradise of Narragonia. Brant here lashes with unsparing vigour the weaknesses and vices of his time. Here he conceivesSaint Grobian , whom he imagines to be thepatron saint of vulgar and coarse people.Although, like most of the German humanists, essentially conservative in his religious views, Brant's eyes were open to the abuses in the church, and the "Narrenschiff" was a most effective preparation for the
Protestant Reformation .Alexander Barclay 's "Ship of Fools" (1509) is a free imitation of the German poem, and a Latin version byJacobus Locher (1497) was hardly less popular than the German original.There is also a large quantity of other "fool literature." Nigel, called
Wireker (fl. 1190), a monk ofChrist Church Priory ,Canterbury , wrote a satirical "Speculum stultorum", in which the ambitious and discontented monk figured as the ass Brunellus, who wanted a longer tail. Brunellus, who was educated inParis , decides to found an order of fools, which shall combine the good points of all the existing monastic orders. "Cock Lovell's Bate" (printed byWynkyn de Worde , c. 1510) is another imitation of the "Narrenschiff". Cock Lovell is a fraudulentcurrier who gathers round him a rascally collection of tradesmen. They sail off in a riotous fashion up hill and down dale throughoutEngland . Brant's other works, of which the chief was a version ofFreidank 's "Bescheidenheit" (1508), are of inferior interest and importance.See also
References
*"Narrenschiff", edited by Friedrich Zarncke (1854)
*byKarl Goedeke (1872)
*byFelix Bobertag ("Kürschner's Deutsche Nationattiteratur", vol. xvi, 1889).Another German translation was published by K Simrock in 1872.
On the influence of Brant in England
*C. H. Herford , "The Literary Relations of England and Germany in the 16th Century" (1886).
*1911External links
*gutenberg author | id=Sebastian_Brant | name=Sebastian Brant
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.