Elisabeth Cruciger (also spelled Kreuziger, Creutziger etc.; née von Meseritz) (c. 1500 – 2 May 1535), a German writer, was the first female poet and hymnwriter of the Protestant Reformation[1] and a friend of Martin Luther.
Life
Elisabeth von Meseritz was born into a noble family in Eastern Pomerania. While still a child, she became a nun at the Marienbusch Abbey, a Premonstratensian cloister in Treptow an der Rega. At the cloisters, she learnt of the religious ideas of the Reformation through Johannes Bugenhagen, one of the influential figures in Lutheranism.
In 1522 Elisabeth left the abbey to move to Wittenberg, where she joined Bugenhagen's household. Then in 1524 she married the theologian Caspar Cruciger, a student and an assistant to Martin Luther. Together they had two children: a daughter, Elisabeth, who married Andreas Kegel, the rector of Luther's hometown Eisleben, and then—on Kegel's death—Luther's son Johannes; and a son, Caspar Cruciger the Younger, who succeeded in Philip Melanchthon's post as professorship at Wittenburg.
Ahuis, Ferdinand (2017), Spehr, Christopher (ed.), "Elisabeth Cruciger, geb. Von Meseritz – Luthers »liebe Els«", Lutherjahrbuch, 84, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht: 224–262, doi:10.13109/9783666874499.224, ISBN978-3-525-87449-3
Bertoglio, Chiara (2017), Reforming Music: Music and the Religious Reformations of the Sixteenth Century, Walter de Gruyter, pp. 641–642, ISBN9783110520811
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Haas, Rainer (1972), "Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon. Bearbeitet und herausgegeben von Friedrich Wilhelm Bautz. Verlag Traugott Bautz, Hamm/Westfalen 1970 (1. und 2. Lieferung)", Zeitschrift für Religions- und Geistesgeschichte, 24 (1): 95–96, doi:10.1163/157007372x01151, ISSN0044-3441
Haemig, Mary Jane (2001), "Elisabeth Cruciger (1500?-1535): The Case of the Disappearing Hymn Writer", The Sixteenth Century Journal, 32 (1): 21–44, doi:10.2307/2671393, JSTOR2671393
Jenny, Markus (1962), Geschichte des Deutschschwveizerischen Evangelischen Gesangbuches imn 16. Jahrhundert, Bärenreiter-Verlag, Basel
Koldau, Linda Maria (2005), Frauen - Musik - Kultur. Ein Handbuch zum deutschen Sprachgebiet der Frühen Neuzeit, Böhlau, pp. 419–423
Schneider-Böklen, Elisabeth (2001), "Elisabeth Cruciger", in Herbst, Wolfgang (ed.), Wer ist wer im Gesangbuch?, Handbuch Zum Evangelischen Gesangbuch, vol. 2, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, pp. 65–66, ISBN9783525503232
Schulze, Hans-Joachim (2006), "Foreword"(PDF), Herr Christ, der einge Gottessohn / Lord Christ, the one begotten son / BWV 96, translated by David Kosviner, Carus-Verlag, pp. 3–4
Volz, Hans (1966), "Woher stammt die Kirchelied-Dichterin Elisabeth Cruciger?", Jahrbuch für Liturgik und Hymnologie, 11: 163–165, JSTOR24193595
White, Micheline (2011), "Women's Hymns in Mid-Sixteenth-Century England: Elisabeth Cruciger, Miles Coverdale, and Lady Elizabeth Tyrwhit", ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes and Reviews, 24: 21–32, doi:10.1080/0895769X.2011.540502, S2CID162210702
(in German) Elisabeth Schneider-Böklen: Elisabeth Cruciger, die erste Dichterin des Protestantismus. In: Gottesdienst und Kirchenmusik. Heft 2/1994, S. 32 ff.
(in German) Wolfgang Herbst: Wer ist wer im Gesangbuch? (Onlineleseprobe)