Everhard Wassenberg also known as Edward of Cleave ( Pol. Ewerhard Wassenberg, lat. Everhardus Wassenbergius) - Polish - Austrian historian of the XVII century, historian Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria and Władysław IV of , King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania , to 1634 continues to use the title Grand Duke of Moscow .
| Everhard [1] Wassenberg | |
|---|---|
| Ewerhard wassenberg | |
| Date of Birth | 1610 |
| Place of Birth | Emmerich am Rhein (now North Rhine-Westphalia , Germany ) |
| Date of death | after 1667 |
| Allegiance | Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth |
| Occupation | historian , historian |
He studied at the University of Leuven . He wrote in Latin . After the publication of Florus Germanicus, Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria appointed him as his secretary, and later as a librarian and historian . In 1637, together with the court of Cecilia Renata of Austria , which became the first wife of the King of Poland and the Grand Duke of Lithuania, Vladislav IV, arrived in Krakow .
E. Wassenberg - author of the works: "Gestorum Vladislai IV pars I et II" and "Johannis Casimiri carcer Gallicus" ( Danzig , 1664 ); the latter was published in Polish ( “Więzienie we Francyi Jana Kazimierza” ), translated by Balinsky, in St. Petersburg , in 1858 .
In the book about King Vladislav IV, he also described the current events in Russia and, by the way, he stated with confidence that False Dmitry I was Tsarevich Dmitry — the real son of Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible .
Selected Works
- Humanae vitae scherarun, conditiones hominum et'mores ad amussim repraesentans.
- Florus Germanicus, sive de bello inter inviefissimos imperatores Ferdinandum II et III, et eorum hostes gesto, ab anno 1627-1640 (1610).
- Gestorum Wladislai IV, Poloniae et Succide Regis, pars I principem panegyrice representans, pars II Regem panegyrice repraesentans (1643).
- Serenissimi Johannis Casimiri Poloniarum Sueciaeque Principis, carcer Gallicus ab Everhardo Wassenbergio conscriptus.
Notes
- ↑ In ESBE is listed as Edward
Links
- Wassenberg, Edward // Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary : 86 tons (82 tons and 4 extra). - SPb. , 1890-1907.