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  1. 8. Apr. 2024 · Michael Servetus (born 1511?, Villanueva or Tudela, Spain—died October 27, 1553, Champel, Switzerland) was a Spanish physician and theologian whose unorthodox teachings led to his condemnation as a heretic by both Protestants and Roman Catholics and to his execution by Calvinists from Geneva.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. 8. Apr. 2024 · Hexerei, Science-Fiction _ oder Wissenschaft? Pioniere der Medizin wie Michael Servetus, Alexander Bogdanow und Jesse Lazear wenden ungeheuerliche Methoden an _ im Dienste der Forschung. Jesse William Lazear bereitet den Weg für die Impfung gegen Gelbfieber. Alexande...

  3. 11. Apr. 2024 · Michael Servetus: Servetus was a Spanish theologian who was burned at the stake in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1553 for heresy and blasphemy. He was accused of holding unorthodox views on the Trinity and of denying the divinity of Jesus.

  4. Vor 19 Stunden · Michael Servetus was the first European to describe the function of pulmonary circulation, although his achievement was not widely recognized at the time, for a few reasons. He firstly described it in the "Manuscript of Paris" [34] [35] (near 1546), but this work was never published.

  5. Slightly adapting the scheme of G. H. Williams, Eire breaks these radicals into three main groups: Anabaptists (the Swiss Brethren, Munsterites, Karlstadt and others), Spiritualists (from John Denck to Caspar Schwenckfeld), and finally the Evangelical Rationalists (Giorgio Biandrata, Michael Servetus, the Socinians, Unitarians). The next ...

  6. Vor 6 Tagen · 77 This is in reference to the execution of the Spanish doctor Michael Servetus in 1553 in Geneva. 78 RC 148, ff. 127–128. 79 RC 148, f. 166 (4 April 1649). 80 ‘Erastianism’ is the belief that civil authorities are superior to chur ...

  7. 17. Apr. 2024 · A year later Beza became a professor of Greek at Lausanne, where he wrote in defense of the burning of the anti-Trinitarian heretic Michael Servetus (died 1553). For several years Beza traveled throughout Europe defending the Protestant cause. He returned to Geneva in 1558.