DBId: 1024
Entry author: Asaph Ben Tov
Node type: Person
Johann Conrad Schwartz
Schoolmaster
Theologian
Doctor
Schwarz, Johann Conrad, Johann Konrad Schwarz"
Jena, Halle, Leipzig, Altdorf
Coburg
Casimirianum (Latin school in Coburg)
1706
1747
Coburg
1677
Coburg
1746
R. Hoche, in Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, vol. 33 p. 239.
Born in Cobourg and educated at the town’s Latin school, Schwartz studied in Jean (1696), Halle, and Leipzig (1703). He was a student of the famous theologian and philosopher Johann Franz Budde (Buddeus). He was appointed extraordinary professor of Latin at the Cobourg Casimirianum in 1706 and in 1713 became professor of rhetoric and Greek there. In 1732 he was appointed professor of theology and oriental languages at the Casimirianum – as well as serving as headmaster. He was also made doctor of theology in Altdorf. Schwartz died in 1747. He published extensively, mostly on Latin and Greek grammar. Among his works are two treatises concerning the Qur’an: an “exposing plagiarism” in the Qur’an (1711) and, more strikingly, a treatise of 1719 in which Schwartz traces in the Qur’an what he believes are genuine Abrahamic philosophical arguments for the existence of God.
Asaph Ben Tov