Johannes Dantiscus

Polish author and bishop
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Also known as: Jan Dantyszek, Jan Flachsbinder
Quick Facts
(Latin), Polish:
Jan Dantyszek
Also called:
Jan Flachsbinder
Born:
November 1, 1485, Gdańsk, Poland
Died:
October 27, 1548, Lidzbark Warmiński (aged 62)
Also Known As:
Jan Dantyszek
Jan Flachsbinder

Johannes Dantiscus (born November 1, 1485, Gdańsk, Poland—died October 27, 1548, Lidzbark Warmiński) was a Polish poet and diplomat who was among the first representatives in Poland of Renaissance humanism. Dantiscus wrote, in Latin, incidental verse, love poetry, and panegyrics (formal speeches of praise).

A courtier to the Polish king Sigismund I, Dantiscus accompanied the king to Vienna in 1515. In 1516 the Holy Roman emperor Maximilian I granted him a certificate of nobility, two doctoral law degrees, and a laurel in poetry. Later in life Dantiscus joined the Roman Catholic church, becoming bishop of Chełmo (1530–37) and then of Warmia (1537).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.