Philipp Nikodemus Frischlin is one of the…
1587 CE
Philipp Nikodemus Frischlin is one of the last of the Renaissance humanists.
The German philologist, educated at the University of Tübingen, had in 1568 become professor of poetry and history.
For his comedy Rebecca, which he had read at Regensburg before the Holy Roman emperor Maximilian II in 1575, he had been rewarded with the laureateship, and in 1577 he had been made a count palatine.
Frischlin had had to leave Tübingen in 1582 and spent two years teaching at Laibach.
Shortly after his return to Tübingen in 1585, he had been threatened with a criminal prosecution for immoral conduct and in 1587 flees to Frankfurt am Main.
Frischlin has often successfully imitated classical models in his Latin verse; his Latin comedies are fresh and vivacious and his commentaries on Virgil's Georgics and Bucolics are important contributions to scholarship.
He also writes plays in German.