In April 1529, as the riots against followers of the Old Faith intensified in
Basel, Erasmus fled to the Catholic city of Freiburg. The 62-year-old Erasmus, reverently known as the Prince of Scholars,
initially stayed in the
Haus zum Walfisch (House of the
Whale), built by
King Maximilian's treasurer
Jakob Villinger. The building is now home to the Municipal Savings Bank.
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Haus zum Walfisch on Franziskanerstraße
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Shortly after he arrived in Freiburg at the beginning of May 1529, Erasmus
wrote enthusiastically to his long-time pen pal
Willibald Pirckheimer
in Augsburg, "At last, I have changed the clod, the Rauraker* has become a
Breisgauer ... The little journey went better than I had expected. The city
council showed me all their kindness of their own accord, even before King
Ferdinand
recommended me by letter. I was given a princely house built for Emperor
Maximilian but remained unfinished... and then a letter later:
Ubi bene ubi patria, as the saying goes. So, I can enjoy the friendly
climate here for a year if Mars doesn't drive me away."
*Augusta Rauraca, the Roman, i.e.. the Latin name for Basel
However, he was mistaken in assuming that he would only stay in Freiburg for a
year and that Emperor Maximilian once chose the Haus zum Walfisch as
his retirement home.
Erasmus believed that the town would let him
live in the Haus zum Walfisch free of charge. He was furious
when the mayor sent him a bill of 30 guilders for the rent at the end of the
year.
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The memorial plaque for Erasmus at the Haus zum Walfisch contains a correction. He lived here from 1529 to 1531, not until 1535, as
initially stated.
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So it was not Mars, the god of war, who drove Erasmus out of his domicile on
Franziskanerstraße but trouble with the city. In 1531, he bought the house
Zum Kind Jesu (To the Child Jesus) on Schiffstraße 7 as his new
residence for 600 Rhenish guilders, which he paid in cash with coins he had
saved in Basel.
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Haus zum Kind Jesu on Schiffstraße 7 before the bombing of Freiburg.
There is a picture of Erasmus on the façade (©Peter Kalchthaler) |
The house purchase contradicted the city charter, according to
which only Freiburg citizens were allowed to acquire property. Four years after arriving in Freiburg, Erasmus finally entered his name in the university register as a
professor theologiae to legalize the purchase. From then on, he lived as an academic citizen in a privileged house exempted from taxes.
When Rector Paulus Getzonis joyfully announced to the
members of the Senate in 1533 that Erasmus had been accepted onto the
university's register, he had no idea that Erasmus would neither lecture at the Albertina nor attend the Senate meetings.
From the outset, he accepted and possessed the dignities but rejected the
burdens.Yet the city and university continued to
court the great humanist, who spread his wings and found, "Theology
is pursued here more weakly than I would like, and the study of languages
flourishes mediocrely. Although the university is well equipped, it is poorly
attended and has more honorable students than numerous ones."
Instead
of being seen at the university, Erasmus had been working since 1533 on his
Liber de sarcienda ecclesiae concordia, deque sedandis opinionum dissidis, cum
aliis nonnullis lectu dignis*, in which he describes Europe as a unified
populus Christianus (Christian people) which also inhabits an
eadem domus
(shared house), in
ecclesia (the Church). He considered the differences
between Catholics and Lutherans to be bridgeable and, like many of his
contemporaries, hoped for a general, unifying council that would create a
concordia fidei in a
concordia caritas. This would require reforms in the
education of the clergy, reforms in morals, and reforms in the church.
*Book
on the restoration of ecclesiastical harmony and the elimination of
differences of opinionAs the
schism progressed, Erasmus felt that the religious cohesion of Europe by the Roman
Church was waning. Instead, he foresaw the emergence of pro-national
structures, "One tribe is driven to battle with another tribe, city against
city, faction against faction, ruler against ruler ... The Englishman is the
enemy of the Frenchman for no other reason than that he is French. The Scot
is the enemy of the Briton for no other reason than that he is a Scot. The
German is the enemy of the Frenchman, and the Spaniard is the enemy of both. The various faiths
wear themselves out in a narcissism of slight differences. They practice
reinforcing their contrasts."
With all his efforts, Erasmus could not heal the disease of schism.
In Erasmus's new domicile on Schiffstraße, renovation work was pending, so he had to deal with blacksmiths, stonemasons, carpenters, plumbers, and glaziers. He wrote in a letter in 1531, "You know this sort of people; it is so
disgusting that I would instead occupy myself for a full three years with
scientific work, however unpleasant, than be plagued with this kind of worry
for a single month." Craftsmen yesterday, today, and tomorrow.
He continued to grumble about Freiburg, "The city is pretty, but not populated enough, "and furthermore, "the town is small, and the inhabitants are superstitious."
He
only found the 68-year-old
Huldrichus Zasius worthy of praise, "I have never
seen anything in Germany that I have admired as much as the character of
Ulrich Zasius. He is sincerity itself, not just sincerity towards his friends. Physically, he is aging, but it is hard to believe how mentally he is still quite fresh; his sharpness of judgment and memory have not suffered in any way. I have never noticed such quick-witted, witty, apt, and well-extemporized
speech, even from an Italian. The speech flows sweeter than honey over his
lips. I expected to find a lawyer, an excellent one, to be sure, but only a
lawyer. But what is there in the mysteries of theology that he has not
examined and thought through? In what part of philosophy is he not fully
versed? Is there any book of the Old and New Testament that he has not opened,
perused, absorbed?"
Erasmus's high regard for
Zasius can probably be traced back to the Freiburg Lenten controversy of 1523. You may
read the story here.
Erasmus's
rejection of Freiburg culminated in the remark, "I would rather live among the
Turks."
Ultimately, he secretly left Freiburg for Basel in 1535, where he died a year
later.
*