Sebastian Krelj

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sebastian Krelj, also known as Sebastjan Krelj, Sebastijan Krelj or Boštjan Krelj (1538-1567) was a Slovene Protestant reformer, writer, theologian, linguist and preacher and regarded as one of the most educated Slovene protestants of the 16th century[1]..

He was born in Vipava, then part of the Duchy of Carniola. He became a follower of the Lutheran preacher and author Primož Trubar, the leader of the Protestant Reformation in the Slovene Lands, whom he assistant as a preacher in Ljubljana. Krelj had a wide linguistic and philologic knowledge: besides Slovene, German andLatin, he knew Ancient Greek, Hebrew, Croatian and glagolitic literature. Krelj put the central dialect into context of dialects spoken by Istrians, the inhabitants of the Vipava Valley and Lower Carniolans. His reforms were taken up by Dalmatin in the bible [2].

In Ljubljana he later became superintendent of Slovenian protestant church.

He died in 1567.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

Languages