Everything about John Of Leyden totally explained
John of Leiden (
Dutch:
Jan van Leiden,
Jan Beukelsz or
Jan Beukelszoon; aka
John Bockold or
John Bockelson) (1509? -
January 22 1536), was an
Anabaptist leader from the
Dutch city of
Leiden. He was the illegitimate son of a Dutch mayor, and a tailor's apprentice by trade.
Life
Raised a bastard and dogged by poverty, young John became a charismatic leader who was widely revered by his followers. According to his own testimony, he went to the German city of
Münster, arriving in 1533, because he'd heard there were inspired preachers there. He sent for
Jan Matthys, who had baptized him, to come. After his arrival Matthys - recognized as a prophet - became the principal leader in the city. Following a failed military attempt on Easter Sunday 1534, in which Matthys died, John of Leiden became King of Münster until its fall in June of 1535. He set up a
theocracy in Münster and led a
communalistic and
polygamous state. Some sources report that John of Leiden took sixteen wives. He publicly beheaded one of his wives after she rebelled against his authority.
The army of Münster was defeated in 1535 by the prince bishop
Franz von Waldeck, and John of Leiden was captured. He was first taken to a dungeon in Dülmen, then brought back to Münster. On
January 22,
1536, along with
Bernhard Krechting and
Bernhard Knipperdolling, he was tortured and then executed. Each attached to a pole by an iron spiked collar, their bodies were ripped with red-hot tongs for the space of an hour, then each was killed with a dagger thrust through the heart. Their bodies were raised in three cages above St. Lambert's Church, the remains left to rot. Their bones were removed about 50 years later, but the cages have remained into the 21st century.
In proverb, on stage and in fiction
John's name still lives on in the Netherlands in the saying
zich met een Jan(tje) van Leiden van iets afmaken, which means
not putting too much effort (or any effort) into something.
The
opera Le prophète (1849) by
Giacomo Meyerbeer features John as its hero. It involves the capture of Munster (Acts III and IV), John's coronation as God's elect at the cathedral (Act IV), and its finale is set in John's palace in Münster.
John also features in
Luther Blissett's novel,
Q.
John Leiden features in
Thomas Nashe's
The Unfortunate Traveller (1594), whose hero, Jack Wilton, satirically describes the siege of Munster and Leiden's death.
John (as Jan Bockelson) is one of the main protagonists in the play
Die Wiedertäufer by
Friedrich DürrenmattFurther Information
Get more info on 'John Of Leyden'.
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