Anthony Thysius the Younger


Antonius Thysius the Younger, also known as Antonius Thysius filius, Antonius Thysius II, or Anthony Thys, was a Dutch jurist, historian, librarian and rhetorician.

Biography

Antonius Thysius the Younger was born in Harderwijk as the son of Antonius Thysius the Elder, who taught theology at the Gymnasium Illustre there. He studied Latin, Greek and Hebrew in Leiden with Daniel Heinsius, Marcus Zuerius van Boxhorn and Constantinus L'Empereur van Oppijck. He then changed his subject to law and graduated as a Doctor of Law on 21 November 1634. On 9 February 1637, he became an associate professor of poetry with special rights. On 21 November 1639, he was also given lectures at the Faculty of Law and on 9 February 1651, he was appointed associate professor of rhetoric.
After becoming assistant at the Leiden University Library on 26 August 1653, he became full professor of rhetoric on 8 November 1653 and the fifth librarian of the university library in 1655 as a successor to Daniel Heinsius, in which capacity he reorganised the library. In 1658 he received the honorable appointment of historian of the States of Holland and, after renouncing his special rights, became Associate Professor of Law on 12 November 1663. He was also involved in the management of Leiden University and was rector in 1658/59.

Librarian

At the end of the tenure of Heinsius as a University librarian, the library had descended into chaos. Acquisition had stopped, and its administration was neglected with many books missing, loaned by curators, professors and members of the university council who had possessed a key to the library. Curators then asked young Thysius in 1653 to draw up a new catalogue and rearrange the library. The plutei - subject bookcases with lecterns, chained books and manuscripts - were removed, and bookcases placed against the library walls containing numbered volumes classified according to faculty. Thysius's attempts to oblige all of the printers of the Dutch Republic to send a copy of every new book to the university library failed. However, the rule was locally in Leiden a success. Thysius also managed to purchase books from the estates of scholars like Boxhorn, Claude Saumaise - who had not always been allowed to use the library by Heinsius and had had to buy many books himself - and André Rivet.

Work

Main works

  • 156 pages.
  • * 479 pages.
  • 305 pages.
  • in
  • 704 pages.

Other works

  • 1639; Wilhelmus Christianus. also with Gronius, Fasciculus quartus opusculorum, Rotterdam 1694.Diss. Epist. de iuris studio, Leiden 1639.Disquisitiones juris publici, Leiden 1641.Oratio funebris in obitum Jac. Brouckhoven, Leiden 1642.Guilielmi Postelli de Republica seu magistratibus Atheniensium liber, met zijn eigen Discursus politicus de eadem materia, Leiden 1645.Sallustii Crispi opera, Leiden 1649, 1654, 1659, Leiden; Rotterdam 1665, Leiden 1677, Amsterdam 1689.Oratio funebris in mortem viri incomparabilis D. Frederici Spanhemii, Lessus Tunebris, Leiden 1649.Justinus, cum selectissimis variorum observationibus, ex accuratâ recessione A.T.J.Cti, Leiden 1650, 1659.L. Annaei Senecae Tragoediae, auctore Polydoro Virgilio, Urbinate. Accessit praeter alia nonnulla series Regum Angliae a primis initiis usque ad hanc aetatem. Ex nova editione A.T.J.C., Leiden 1651.
  • 1655, Leiden.L. Coelii Lactantii Firmani opera, Leiden 1652.Oratio funebris in mortem H.M. Tromp, Leiden 1653
  • 388 pages. Also 1668.
  • * also Oratio funebris in obitum viri clarissimi et praestantissimi Dn. Lamberti Barlaei, Gruec. Litter.-Profess. longedignissimi Leiden 1655; also in Henning Witte: Memoriae philosophorum
  • 70 pages.
  • , 1688

Literature

  • 496 pages.
  • Title: Thysius, Anton, Rechtsgelehrter und Historicus. In German. Consulted on 29 May 2025.
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