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  1. Arminius was a chief of the Cherusci. In the service of the Romans he had obtained both citizenship and equestrian rank. Six years after the Teutoburg Forest Massacre, Germanicus Caesar engaged Arminius in battle, capturing his wife, Thusnelda, but in 16 ce Arminius skillfully survived a full-scale Roman attack.

  2. Arminius analyzes the nature and causes of the first sin most clearly in one private and two public disputations. 2 He describes the first sin of humanity’s first parents as disobedience and offense against the “legal covenant” that God had made with humanity, resulting in a fall from the original “state of integrity.” 3 This so-called legal covenant (legale foedus) or covenant of ...

  3. Arminius, Arminianism, and Europe. : BRILL, Sep 15, 2009 - Religion - 324 pages. 19 October 2009 marked the 400th anniversary of the death of Jacobus Arminius in Leiden. He was esteemed for the way in which he sought a via media between strict Calvinism and a more humanistic variant of Christian belief. However, because of his deviation from ...

  4. Image Source: Wikipedia. Jacobus Arminius (aka Jacob Arminius, James Arminius, and his Dutch name Jacob Harmenszoon) was a Dutch theologian, best known as the founder of the anti-Calvinistic school in Reformed Protestant theology, thereby lending his name to a movement which resisted some of the tenets of Calvinism - Arminianism.

  5. dutchrevolt.leiden.edu › dutch › personenarminius - Patria

    Arminius, Jacobus. Oudewater, 10 oktober 1560 - Leiden, 19 oktober 1609. Nederlands gereformeerd predikant, sedert 8 mei 1603 hoogleraar godgeleerdheid te Leiden. Introduction to Arminius disputations, by Keith Stanglin (Grand Rapids, USA)

  6. 19. Okt. 2016 · Arminius in the Service of Rome. Born c. 18 BCE, Arminius was the eldest son of the Cherusci chief Segimer. To secure peace with Rome, Segimer is thought to have surrendered both Arminius and his younger brother Flavus to Rome as child hostages. Raised like noble Romans, the brothers learned Latin and became gained experience in Roman warfare.

  7. was at Leiden that Arminius’ Latin name, Jacobus Arminius, was first used. (9) Arminius excelled very well in his studies, earning the respect of his peers such that “Whenever anything was to be written, or spoken, or any doubt resolved, Arminius was sure to be consulted.” (10) By 1578 Arminius’ cousin Rudolfus Snellius was employed by the