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Martin Bucer
(redirected from Martin Butzer)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
Bucer, Martin 

(also Martin Butzer). Born Nov. 11, 1491, in Schlettstadt; died Feb. 28, 1551, in Cambridge. Active figure in the radical middle-class Reformation in southwest Germany.

Bucer lived in Strasbourg from 1523 to 1549. He held a prominent position in a group of higher German reformers who, while following M. Luther, at the same time were more consistently overcoming Catholicism in theology and divine service. He had an influence on J. Calvin. In 1549, Bucer moved to England, became a professor in Cambridge, and took part in the English Reformation movement.

REFERENCES

Bornkamm, H. Martin Bucers Bedeutung. … Gütersloh, 1952. (With bibliography.)
Pollet, J. V. Martin Bucer …, vols. 1-2. Paris, 1958-62.


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Peyronal Rambaldi parallels these and other central ideas to those of other reformers, especially Martin Butzer, if less convincingly.
Peyronal Rambaldi parallels these and other central ideas to those of other reformers, especially Martin Butzer, if less convincingly.
 
 
 
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