Jacobus Revius

Dutch writer
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Also known as: Jacob van Reefsen
Quick Facts
(Latin),:
Dutch:
Jacob van Reefsen
Born:
November 1586, Deventer, Netherlands
Died:
November 15, 1658, Leiden
Also Known As:
Jacob van Reefsen
Notable Works:
“Over-IJsselsche sangen en dichten”
Subjects Of Study:
Calvinism

Jacobus Revius (born November 1586, Deventer, Netherlands—died November 15, 1658, Leiden) was a Dutch Calvinist poet long esteemed only as a theologian but later acknowledged as the greatest Christian lyricist of his period.

Revius was a Dutch Reformed church minister who was a vigorous supporter of Protestantism, and his poetry is invariably scriptural or moralistic. His collection Over-IJsselsche sangen en dichten (1630; “Over-IJssel Songs and Poems”) shows the stylistic influence of the French Renaissance poet Pierre de Ronsard as well as Revius’s affinities with the English Metaphysical poets in his prolific use of stark metaphor and the profusion of four-line epigrams. The best-known sonnet from the collection is “Hy droech onse smerten” (“He Bore Our Sorrows”), a moving profession of guilt at Christ’s death.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.