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C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Ulrich von Hutten (1488–1523)

Hutten, Ulrich von (höt’ten). A German poet, theologian, and controversial satirist; born in Steckelburg, near Fulda, 1488; died in the island of Ufenau, Lake Zürich, 1523. Of a noble family and destined for the church, he preferred a life of roving adventure. After many vicissitudes, including shipwreck, military service, and absolute beggary, he rose to fame by brilliant contributions to the current religious and political controversies. His works include: ‘The Art of Prosody’; ‘Nemo,’ a satire upon the pedantic learning of his day; ‘Dialogues’; and various others, most of them attacking abuses in the church. His most noteworthy production, however (his in part if not wholly), is the ‘Letters of Obscure Men’ mercilessly ridiculing the ignorance of the lower clergy.