Martin Rinkart
Born: April, 1586, Eilenburg, Saxony.
Died: December, 1649, Eilenburg, Saxony, Germany.
Buried:
Stadtkirche, Eilenburg, Saxony.
A memorial tablet was affixed to his house on Easter Monday, April 26, 1886.
After attending the Latin School at Eilenburg, Rinkart became, in November 1601,
a foundation scholar and chorister of the St. Thomas School in Leipzig. This
scholarship also let him proceed to the University of Leipzig, where he enrolled
for the summer session of 1602 as a theology student. After completing his
studies, he stayed for some time in Leipzig (he did not take his master’s
degree until 1616). In March 1610 he offered himself as a candidate for the post
of diaconus at Eilenburg, and was presented to the Town Council, but the
Superintendent refused to sanction the arrangement, nominally on the grounds
that Rinkart was a better musician than theologian, but really because he was
unwilling to have a strong willed colleague who was native of Eilenburg.
So instead, Rinkart took a position at the Eisleben Gymnasium
in June 1610, also serving as cantor at St. Nicholas Church. After a
few months, he became diaconus of St. Anne’s Church in the Neustadt
of Eisleben. He became pastor at Erdeborn and Lütjendorf, near Eisleben, in 1613. In 1617, he
became archidiaconus at Eilenburg.
Rinkart
was a voluminous writer and a good musician. Among other things, he
wrote a cycle of seven dramas (“comedies”), suggested by the centenary of the
Reformation in 1617. His hymns appeared mainly in
the following:
Hymns