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Johann Michael Nathanaiel Feneberg › Hymnals

Johann Michael Nathanaiel Feneberg
www.theodor-frey.de/feneberg.htm
Short Name: Johann Michael Nathanaiel Feneberg
Full Name: Feneberg, Johann Michael Nathanaiel, 1751-1812
Birth Year: 1751
Death Year: 1812

Feneberg, Johann Michael, was born Feb. 9, 1751, at Oberdorf, Allgäu, Bavaria. He was for some time tutor in St. Paul’s College, at Regensburg, and in 1785 was appointed professor in the Gymnasium at Dillingen. In 1793 he became parish priest of Seeg, in Allgäu, where he had as assistants Christoph Schmid, Martin Boos and Johannes Gossner; but in 1805, on account of his Evangelical teaching, was removed to Vohringen, near Ulm, where he died Oct. 12, 1812.

The only hymn by him translation into English is:—
Liebe und ein Kreuz dazu. [Cross and Consolation.) Of the origin of this beautiful hymn Koch, vi. 554, relates that it was "written at Seeg in 1794, as he, in the experience of the blessings of the cross after the amputation of his right foot, rendered necessary by an unfortunate fall on Oct. 21, 1793, had once more, on Easter Sunday [1794], renewed in body and soul, been able to ascend the pulpit as 'a wooden-legged man.'" It appeared in the Sammlung erbaulicher Lieder zum Gebrauche in christlichen Häusern, Kempten, 1812 (edition 1817, No. 102), in 8 stanzas of 4 lines. It is translated as, "Love and a cross together blest," by Miss Borthwick in Hymns from the Land of Luther, 1862, p. 38; 1884, p. 205. [Rev. James Mearns, M.A.]

--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Wikipedia Biography

Johann Michael Nathanael Feneberg, born in Oberdorf, Allgäu, Bavaria, February 9, 1751; died October 12, 1812. He studied at Kaufbeuren and in the Jesuit gymnasium at Augsburg, and in 1770 entered the Society of Jesus, at Landsberg, Bavaria. When the Society was suppressed in 1773, he left the town, but continued his studies, was ordained in 1775 and appointed professor in the gymnasium of St. Paul at Ratisbon. From 1778-85 he held a modest benefice at Oberdorf and taught a private school, in 1785 he was appointed professor of rhetoric and poetry at the gymnasium of Dillingen, but was removed in 1793, together with several other professors suspected of leanings towards Illuminism. A plan of studies drawn up by him for the gymnasium brought him many enemies also. He was next given the paris

No Hymnals by Johann Michael Nathanaiel Feneberg
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