Johannes Heinrich Ursinus Explained

Johannes Heinrich Ursinus (also known as Johannes Henricus Ursinus, Iohannes Henricus Ursinus, Johann Heinrich Ursin and even John Henry Ursinus) (26 January 1608 in Speyer  - 14 May 1667[1] in Regensburg) was a learned German author, scholar, Lutheran theologian, humanist and dean of Regensburg.

Ursinus studied the Oriental roots of western philosophy and was the author of a scholastic encyclopaedia. He was a Rector in Mainz, preached in Weingarten, Speier and Regensburg, and had been a student in Straßburg.[2] His Arboretum Biblicum, which appeared in 1663, was the first attempt of note to create a concordance of botanical references in the Bible, and predated the Hierozoicon, a zoological compendium of biblical animals, of Samuel Bochart.[3] In all Ursinus published 137 works in 153 publications in 3 languages.

The plant genus Ursinia was named after Ursinus by the German botanist, Joseph Gaertner.

Selected works

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/servlet/RechercheEquation;jsessionid=2499CD1CD8AFA8043792FEB3D2846536?TexteCollection=HGARSTUVWXYZ1DIECBMJNQLOKP&TexteTypeDoc=DESNFPIBTMCJOV&Equation=IDP%3Dcb10578815n&host=catalogue BnF catalogue general
  2. Web site: Johannes Heinrich Ursinus.
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=3MwsAAAAYAAJ&dq=%22Arboretum+biblicum%22+1685&pg=PR5 Palestine: The Bible History of the Holy Land, Volume 2 - John Kitto