Jan Blahoslav
Quick Facts
Biography
Jan Blahoslav (20 February 1523 – 24 November 1571) was a Czech humanistic writer, poet, translator, etymologist, hymnographer, grammarian, music theorist and composer. He was a Unity of the Brethren bishop, and translated the New Testament into Czech in 1564. This was incorporated into the Bible of Kralice.
Life
Blahoslav was born in Přerov, Moravia. He studied theory under Listenius and Hermann Finck at University of Wittenberg from 1544. At Wittenberg he became acquainted with Martin Luther, and he was also acquainted with Philipp Melanchthon. After a short period at Mladá Boleslav (1548–9) he continued his education at Königsberg and Basle. He was a fine linguist who strove to preserve the purity of his native tongue and succeeded in bridging the gulf between Christianity and humanism. He was ordained at Mladá Boleslav in 1553, and became a bishop of the Fraternity of Czech (or Moravian) Brethren in 1557. In the following year he established himself at Ivančice, where before long he installed a printing press. Towards the end of his life he moved to Moravský Krumlov, where he died, aged 48.
Blahoslav's work influenced Jan Amos Komenský.
Works
- O původu Jednoty – Rules of Unity
- Filipika proti misomusům
- Gramatika česká – Czech Grammar
- Bratrský archiv
- Naučení mládencům
- Akta Jednoty bratrské – Rules of the Unity of the Brethren
- Rejstřík skladatelů bratrských písní
Works on music
- Muzika (Olomouc, 1558) – On Music
- Šamotulský kancionál (1561) – Cantionale
- Věčný králi, pane náš – Song published in Staročeské hymny a písně (Old Czech Hymns and Songs) (1940)