Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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1made Burgomaster by the command of the Prince. This would be Maurice,
and it is all the more a tribute to the high respect with which Agricola was
held, for, as said before, he was a consistent Catholic, and Maurice a Protestant
Prince.
In this same year the Schmalkalden War broke out, and Agricola
was called to personal attendance upon the Duke Maurice in a diplomatic
and advisory capacity.
In 1546 also he was a member of the Diet of Freiberg,
and was summoned to Council in Dresden.
The next year he continued, by
the Duke's command, Burgomaster at Chemnitz, although he seems to have
been away upon Ducal matters most of the time.
The Duke addresses11
the Chemnitz Council in March, 1547: “We hereby make known to you
that we are in urgent need of your Burgomaster, Dr.
Georgius Agricola,
with us.
It is, therefore, our will that you should yield him up and forward
him that he should with the utmost haste set forth to us here near Freiberg.”
He was sent on various missions from the Duke to the Emperor Charles, to
King Ferdinand of Austria, and to other Princes in matters connected with the
war—the fact that he was a Catholic probably entering into his appointment
to such missions.
Chemnitz was occupied by the troops of first one side, then
the other, despite the great efforts of Agricola to have his own town specially
defended.
In April, 1547, the war came to an end in the Battle of Mühlberg,
but Agricola was apparently not relieved of his Burgomastership until the
succeeding year, for he wrote his friend Wolfgang Meurer, in April, 1548,12
that he “was now relieved.” His public duties did not end, however, for he
attended the Diet of Leipzig in 1547 and in 1549, and was at the Diet
at Torgau in 1550. In 1551 he was again installed as Burgomaster; and in
1553, for the fourth time, he became head of the Municipality, and during
this year had again to attend the Diets at Leipzig and Dresden, representing
his city.
He apparently now had a short relief from public duties, for it is
not until 1555, shortly before his death, that we find him again attending a
Diet at Torgau.
Agricola died on November 21st, 1555. A letter13 from his life-long friend,
Fabricius, to Melanchthon, announcing this event, states: “We lost, on
November 21st, that distinguished ornament of our Fatherland, Georgius
Agricola, a man of eminent intellect, of culture and of judgment.
He
attained the age of 62. He who since the days of childhood had enjoyed
robust health was carried off by a four-days' fever.
He had previously
suffered from no disease except inflammation of the eyes, which he brought
upon himself by untiring study and insatiable reading. . . I know that
you loved the soul of this man, although in many of his opinions, more
especially in religious and spiritual welfare, he differed in many points from
our own.
For he despised our Churches, and would not be with us in the
Communion of the Blood of Christ.
Therefore, after his death, at the
command of the Prince, which was given to the Church inspectors and
carried out by Tettelbach as a loyal servant, burial was refused him, and not

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