The satirist Johann Fischart, the principal German…
1580 CE
The satirist Johann Fischart, the principal German literary opponent of the Counter-Reformation, had received a good education and before 1570 traveled widely, visiting the Netherlands and probably England and studying in Paris, Strasbourg, and Siena, Italy.
He had received a doctor juris degree in Base in 1574, but from 1570 he has lived mostly in Strasbourg.
Of his main works, the earliest are attacks on the papacy, Franciscans, and Dominicans.
Beginning as a Lutheran, he has come to defend Calvinist doctrines—the only major German writer to do so.
His works also ridicule the fashions of the age.
Fischart's principal work is the Affentheurliche und ungeheurliche Geschichtsschrift (1575)—renamed Geschichtklitterung in later editions (1582, 1590)—a greatly expanded prose version of François Rabelais's Gargantua.
Also noteworthy is his Das glückhafft Schiff von Zürich (1576; “The Ship of Good Fortune from Zurich”), one of the most carefully constructed sixteenth-century narrative poems, commemorating the boatload of Zürich citizens who brought to Strasbourg a basin of porridge, still warm after a daylong journey.