Hermann Van Flekwyk (or Vlekwijk, died June 10, 1569) was a Dutch Anabaptist, whose name has become memorable, in consequence of an examination for heresy conducted by the Franciscan Cornelius Adrians[1] later translated.[2]

Among the charges against Flekwyk: "You have sucked at the poisoned breast of Erasmus"[3] and having "blasphemed against the true body and blood of God, by speaking against the Mass,"[4] To the charges Herman replied "Can you shed the blood of a good Christian?"[5] He was executed at Bruges.

References

  1. Robert Wallace, Antitrinitarian Biography (1850). A detailed account of the trial is found in Grantley McDonald, Biblical Criticism in Early Modern Europe: Erasmus, the Johannine Comma, and Trinitarian Debate (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016), 89–94.
  2. Joshua Toulmin? "Dr. Toulmin published a translation of the dialogue"
  3. Simon Goldhill Who needs Greek?: contests in the cultural history of Hellenism 2002 "Look at the following dialogue of inquisition recorded between the Franciscan friar Cornelius Adrian and an Anabaptist called Hermann van Flekwyk..."
  4. Leonard Williams Levy Blasphemy: verbal offense against the sacred, from Moses to Salman Rushdie 1995
  5. Gérard Brandt Histoire abrégée de la réformation des Païs-Bas 1726 d'un Anti-Trinitaire, nommé Herman van Flekwyk, n'est pas moins déplorable ... Herman repliqua : "Pourriez-vous répandre le sang d'un bon Chrétien ...?"
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