Bucer's friend and colleague Wolfgang Capito had…
December 1542 CE
Bucer's friend and colleague Wolfgang Capito had first succumbed to the disease; then Bucer's wife Elisabeth had died on November 16, 1541.
How many children Elisabeth had borne is unknown; several died during childbirth or at a young age.
One son, Nathanael, although mentally and physically handicapped, had survived to adulthood and is to remain with the Bucer family throughout his life.
During Elisabeth's final hours, she had urged Bucer to marry Capito's widow, Wibrandis Rosenblatt, after her death.
He had married Rosenblatt on April 16, 1542, as her fourth husband—she had outlived Ludwig Keller, Johannes Oecolampadius, and Wolfgang Capito.
She has brought with her four children from her previous marriages. (The new couple will produce a daughter, whom they will name Elisabeth.)
On February 5, 1542, Bucer and Gropper had met with Hermann von Wied, archbishop-elector of Cologne, to discuss the introduction of church reform in his archdiocese.
As one of the seven electors of the Holy Roman Empire, the archbishop of Cologne is a key political figure for both the emperor and the reformers.
After consulting the territorial diet, the archbishop enlists Bucer to lead the reform, and on December 14, he moves to Bonn, the capital of the electorate.