Johannes Pfefferkorn, a Jewish convert to Christianity,…
1521 CE
Johannes Pfefferkorn, a Jewish convert to Christianity, had become convinced that the principal source of the obduracy of the Jews lies in their books, which he has tried to have seized and destroyed.
He is opposed in this endeavor by Johann Reuchlin and the theologians of Cologne, among others.
Both parties had been silenced in June 1513, by the emperor.
Pfefferkorn, however, had in 1514 published new polemic, Sturmglock, against both the Jews and Reuchlin.
During the controversy, Pfefferkorn had been assailed in the Epistolæ obscurorum virorum by the young Humanists who espoused Reuchlin's cause.
He had replied with Beschirmung, or Defensio J. Pepericorni contra famosas et criminales obscurorum virorum epistolas (Cologne, 1516), Streitbüchlein (1517).
Pope Leo X in 1520 had declared Reuchlin guilty with a condemnation of Augenspiegel, and Pfefferkorn writes as an expression of his triumph Ein mitleidliche Klag (Cologne, 1521).