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David of Augsburg
(DE AUGUSTA).
Medieval German mystic, b. probably at Augsburg, Bavaria, early in the
thirteenth century; d. at Augsburg, 19 November, 1272. He entered the
Franciscan Order probably at Ratisbon, where a monastery of this order was in
existence as early as 1226; the Franciscan monastery at Augsburg was not
erected until 1243. At Ratisbon David filled the position of master of novices
and wrote for the spiritual benefit of the latter his celebrated Formula
Novitiorum
. Whether the distinguished Franciscan preacher Berthold of Ratisbon
was one of his pupils is at least very doubtful. In 1246 Berthold and David
were appointed inspectors of the convent of Niedermünster at Ratisbon. From
about 1250 David accompanied Berthold on his missionary tours and most probably
took part in the preaching himself; he also had a share in the proceedings of
the Inquisition against the Waldenses. On the day of David's death it is said
that Berthold, who was preaching in a distant place, stopped in the midst of
his sermon and quoted, in reference to his friend who had just passed away, the
following lines of the hymn, Iste Confessor
:
Qui pius, prudens, humilis, pudicus,
Sobriam duxit sine labe vitam
etc. David wrote both in Latin and German. For a long period his Latin works
were attributed to others, at times to St. Bernard of Clairvaux and St.
Bonaventure, a proof of the high esteem in which they were held. The most
striking case of this mistaken ascription is that of the Formula Novitiorum
which in addition to two letters of David form three books: (1) De Compositione
hominis exterioris
(treats of the external life of the member of an order); (2)
De Reformatione hominis interioris
; (3) De septem processibus regiliosorum
.
This work, of which the different parts often appeared separately, is a rational
and progressive introduction to monastic and mystical life. It was first
published under the name of St. Bonaventure (Brescia, 1485; Venice, 1487;
Antwerp,1591; Cologne, 1618); it appeared also in the editio Vaticana of the
works of St. Bonaventure (Rome, 1588-96), and consequently in all of the
reprints of this edition. It also appeared in the Magna Bibliotheca veterum
Patrum
(Cologne, 1618), vol. XIII, in the Maxima Bibliotheca vet. Patr.
(Lyons, 1675, vol. XXV, and, in part, among the doubtful works of St. Bernard of
Clairvaux in Migne, P. L., CLXXXIII, col. 1189. The Latin edition published at
Augsburg in 1596 was issued in German at the same place in 1597. The latest and
by far the best edition is that which appeared at Quaracchi (1889), in the
introduction to which the work is positively ascribed to Brother David of
Augsburg; a list of 370 manuscripts is also given. David's treatise De hæresi
pauperum de Lugduno
was erroneously issued, in an incomplete form, by Martène
and Durand (Thesaurus novus anecdot., V, 1777 sqq.) under the name of the
Dominican Yvonnet; but it has been proved by Pfeiffer and Preger to be one of
David's writings and the full text was edited by Preger for the first time.
Extracts from David's Expositio Regulæ
, an explanation of the monastic rules
of St. Francis of Assisi, have been edited by E. Lempp.
Attention was first called to David's German writings by Pfeiffer, who in
1845 published the following eight treatises and ascribed them to David: (1)
Die sieben Vorregeln der Tugend
; (2) Der Spiegel der Tugend
; (3) Christi
Leben unser Vorbild
(to this treatise Pfeiffer found later a continuation five
times larger than the part published); (4) Die vier Fittiche geistlicher
Betrachtung
; (5) Von der Anschauung Gottes
; (6) Von der Erkenntnis der
Wahrheit
; (7) Von der unergründlichen Fülle Gottes; (8)
Betrachtungen und
Gebete
. Preger raised doubts as to the correctness of ascribing these tractates,
with the exception of the firt three, to David, but his attack proved a failure
and Pfeiffer's views have been successfully defended by Hecker and Telinegg. It
must, however, be acknowledged that the eighth contains much that was common
property in the Middle Ages. David's German treatises are fine examples of
German prose and assure him a permanent place in the history of German
literature. Like the radiance of a gently burning flame they attract the heart
and spirit of the reader to the beautiful and the Divine. They turn the mind
from vice and error with most convincing eloquence and kindle in it the love of
God. In these writing, as in the treatises for novices, David is at all times
the circumspect mystic, averse to fantastic ecstasy and exaggeration. A sober
good sense pervades his profound yet animated expositions, which have nothing in
common with the vagaries of the German mystics of the fourteenth centuiry,
although David's influence on the latter is not to be denied. His writings
exerted some influence also on the Schwabenspiegel
(Swabian Mirror), the
well-known compilation of civil law used in Southern Germany, which appeared
about 1268. Personally David belonged to the earlier school mystics.
PFEIFFER, Deutsche Mystiker des XIV. Jahrhunderts (Leipzig, 1845-57), I; IDEM in HAUPT, Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum (Leipzig, 1853), IX, 1 sqq.; PREGER, Gesch. der deutschen Mystik im M. A. (Leipzig, 1874-93), I, 268 sqq.; DENIFLE in Historisch-politische Blätter, LXXV, 679 sqq.; LEMPP in Zeitschrift für Kirchengesch. (1898), XIX, 345 sqq.; DAVID OF AUGSBURG, De exterioris et interioris hominis compositione libri III (Quaracchi, 1899), Introduct., 4 sqq.; Ger. tr. by THOMAS VILLANOVA, Wegweiser zur christ. Vollkommenheit von D. von A., with supplementary matter; PREGER, Der Tractat des D. von A. über die Waldenser in Abhandlungen der k. Akademie der Wiss. (Munich, 1878), cl. III, vol. XIV, Pt. II, 183-235, also published separately; RIEDER, Das Leben Bertholds von Regensburg (Freiburg, 1901), 10-16; MICHAEL, Gesch. des deutschen Volkes vom XIII. Jahrhunderts bis zum Ausgang des M. A. (Freiburg im Br., 1897 - ), II, III, passim; TELLINEGG, David von Augsburg, dessen deutsche Schriften auf ihre Echtheit untersucht (St. Paul, 1904, 1905), not completed; HECKER, Kritische Beiträge zu D. von A. Persönlichkeit und Schriften (Hamburg, 1905).
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