Julius Micrander


Julius Erici Micrander Uplandiensis was a Swedish professor, member of the Swedish Parliament and vicar with the Church of Sweden.

Biography

Micrander was born in the rectory of Bro Church in Uppland, Sweden. His father was Ericus Georgi Micranderan, vicar in Tierp parish and his mother was Benedicta Eriksdotter. By age 10, Micrander was a student at Uppsala University. At age 28, he was studying for a master's degree with the De educatione liberorum.
In 1687, Micrander received his second professorship in theology. In 1676, Micrander was appointed as extraordinary professor of Greek, becoming a professor the next year. In 1685, university Chancellor Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie appointed Micrander professor of theology. Micrander was ordained as a priest in the Church of Sweden and became vicar of Cartesian controversy at the university. Orthodox Aristotelian [supporters">Cartesianism">Cartesian controversy at the university. Orthodox Aristotelian [supporters, such as Micrander, believed that Rene Descartes philosophy threatened the purity of the Christian faith. Micrander was influenced by the German theologian Johann Adam Osiander and published his strongly anti-Cartesian Collegium theologicum in præcipuas Controversies theo Logica habitum Olim in Sweden during 1690.
Micrander was a member of parliament in 1689. In 1694, he was appointed superintendent of the Diocese of Härnösand in Västernorrland County.