OTHO (OTTO), ANTON. See ANTINOMIANISM, IL, 1, ~ b.
WTOOLE, LAURENCE, SAINT (LORCA UA TUATHAIL) : Archbishop of Dublin; b. in Leinster, Ireland, e. 1130; d. at Eu (Latin, Augium, 17 m. n.n.e. of Dieppe on the English Channel) Nov. 14, 1180. He was brought up and educated to the monastic life in the monastery of Glendalough, of which he became abbot at the age of twenty five. In 1162 he was consecrated archbishop of Dublin. He was canonized by Honorius III. in 1226; and was the first Irishman to labor in his native land and receive canonization.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: The Vita by an anonymous author is in M, Flan7Viun imutw aandorum, pp. 379 M,
OtteOtto of ssmbere THE NEW SCHAFF HERZOG 286
Paris, 1624. Consult: J. Lanigan, Red. Hiat. of Ireland, iv. 228 244, Dublin, 1829; DNB, xlu. 339 340.
OTTE, CHRISTOPH HEINRICH:German archeologist; b. in Berlin Mar. 24, 1808; d. at Mer9eburg (56 m. s.s.e. of Magdeburg) Aug. 12, 1890. He received his theological education at Berlin and Halle, and passed his second examination in 1832; he was then pastor at Fr6hden near Jiiterbog in Saxony, 1832 78, and retired for his last years to Merseburg. His great interest in archeology was not gained from his university course, but rather from observation of the monuments and from the cathedral at Merseburg; he was stimulated also by association with Puttrich and K. E. Foratemann, and in this way became the leading authority in German ecclesiastical archeology of the Middle Ages. His first book, Kurzer Abriss einer kirchlichen Kunst Archdologie des devtachen Mittelalters (Nordhausen, 1842) grew from thirty two pages in its first to 1,462 in its fifth edition (1883 85), an illustration of the development in the science under the man who was really the pioneer in this particular field. Indeed, all of his books passed through several editions, and remain useful in their departments. Among these may be named Archdologir aches Worterbuch zur Erklarung der in Schriften uber mideWterliche Kunst vorkommender Kun8tausdrueke (Leipsie, 1857); Archdologischer Katechismus: kurzer Unterricht in der kirchlichen Kunstarchdologie des deutaehen MiVelalters (1859). He also edited the brief lived but worthy Zeitschrift fur chrlstliche Archdologie and Kunst (1856 58). It is noteworthy that these works were accomplished by a man engaged in the absorbing cares of the
pastorate. (VICTOR SCHULTZE.)
OTTER, JAKOB: Reformer; b. at Lauterburg (34 m. n.e. of Strasburg) c. 1485; d. at Esslingen (7 m. e.s.e. of Stuttgart) Mar., 1547. In 1507 he came as baccalaureus to Strasburg, and became a priest of the cloister of the Penitents, and secretary to Johann Geiler of Kaisersberg (q.v.). He then edited some of his master's works, and Gerson's Sermo de paasione. Upon Geiler's death, 1510, Otter went to Freiburg, obtaining the master's dogree in 1515, and was qualified as licentiate in 1517. He continued issuing Geiler's works until 1513. In 1518 Otter became pastor at Wolfenweiler, near Freiburg, and labored there as an adherent of Luther even as early as 1520. In 1522 he removed to the Austrian village of Kenzingen. There he pursued his calling as a Reformer with quiet moderation and much success. He defended himself from the reproach of heresy and insurrection by publishing his sermons on the epistle to Titus (Strasburg, 1524). The sovereign, Archduke Ferdinand, demanded his removal, and the diet threatened him with forcible procedure. To spare his congregar tion, Otter withdrew, on June 24, 1524, escorted by 150 citizens; turning first into the district of Margrave Ernst of Baden, then to Strasburg. From Strasburg Otto was recommended to the Knight Hans Landschad, a zealous adherent of Luther, who granted him the pastorate of Neckarsteinach, near Heidelberg. He won the whole congregation to the new faith, soon abolished the mass, procured by
sale of church properties a regular administration of church charities, and maintained peace and quiet at Neckarsteinach during the excesses of the Peasants' War. Otter dedicated to his patron, 1528, the beautiful tract, Chrlstlich Leben and Sterben (Strasburg, 1528). King Ferdinand and his counselors viewed Otter solely as an agitator and seducer of Kenzingen, and the king more than once demanded his dismissal. Hans Landschad valiantly defended his pastor, who, in turn, justified himself against the calumniations of his adversaries, by means of his sermons on " The First Book of Moses" (Hagenau, 1528). Ferdinand persisted in urging Elector Ludwig of the Palatinate to proceed against Otter; and finally, in Feb., 1529, succeeded in having Landschad summoned before the high court of justice at Heidelberg. Otter's dismissal was demanded under threat of the emperor's disfavor. Landschad refused, and the elector now forcibly expelled Otter, who then went to Strasburg. Capito commended him to Zwingli, through whose mediation he was called as pastor to Soleure by a minority of the council. Provoking only unrest by his preachipg, he relinquished the position, and went to Bern, *hence, at the end of Aug., 1529, he went to Aarau. Here he married; wrote a catechism, Bin kurz Yn"ung (1530), which was but little adapted for children; and was recording chairman of the conference with the Anabaptists at Bern in 1531. He was also an eager mediator in the negotiations between Zurich and the original cantons, Sept., 1531.
On Apr. 2, 1532, Blaurer (q.v.) called him to take charge of the church at Esslingen, where the former had labored as Reformer, and where Luther's cause had early found friends. At first Otter's efficiency was impeded by jealousy on the part of Chaplain Martin Fuchs, and Otter even thought of resigning, but Fuchs was dismissed. Otter labored very faithfully in propagating the Reformation. He created an order of worship in 1533; a form of order and discipline 1534, and lay ministration for the sick. He provided for the improvement of juvenile instruction, issuing his revised catechism in 1532 and a brief summary of the faith, 1534, with succinct directions concerning spiritual attention to the sick and dying. He mitigated Blaurer's form of expulsion with deference to those infirm. He antagonized both Roman Catholics and Anabaptists, and also Schwenkfeld, who had made some advances toward him. When Duke Ulrich of Wiirttemberg recovered his domains in May, 1534, Otter was called, in July, to preach at Stuttgart as colleague of Alber; but the Lutherans about the duke received him distrustfully, because Otter held Zwingli's view and that of the South Germans regarding the Eucharist. Strife ensued, until Otter, with Butzer and the South Germans, went to Wittenberg in May, 1536, and ratified the peace with Luther in terms of the Wittenberg Concord; to which conclusion Otter in vain sought to win Blaurer. Otter rendered service to the entire Evangelical church by means of his excellent Betbiichlein fiir allerley gemein Anliegen der Kirchen (Strasburg, 1537 41). The " little man " gradually gained a firm position at Esslingen, but collapsed
287
under the horrors of the Schmalkald War and the emperor's Spaniards, in Mar., 1547. Nevertheless he was spared from the bitterest anguish for South German Protestantism during the Interim.
Well did Butzer describe his friend Otter as " a man distinguished not by sound learning alone, but also by Christian virtues, and especially by modesty, forbearance, charity; a man of innocent life, pure doctrine, averse to all manner of pompous pride, one of consummate skill in dealing with all the various concerns of our Church."
G. BossERT.
BIBLJO(iRAPBY: H. 8ueann, Jakob Otter, CaAeruhe, 1893; Brieatoechael der Brader . . . Blaurer, ed. 8chiesa, 2 vols., Freiburg, 1908 10; and the literature under Br.AuRa$, AmBaosIOs.
OTTERBEIN, otter bain, PHILIP WILLIAM: Founder of the United Brethren in Christ (q.v.); b. at Dillenburg (40 m. n.e. of Coblenz), Prussia, June 3, 1726; d. in Baltimore Nov. 17, 1813. He belonged to a family of ministers of the German Reformed Church, entered the school of Herborn in 1742 and completed the course there, including three years in theology, and in 1749 was ordained and became vicar at Ockersdorf. In 1752 he accompanied the Rev. Michael Schlatter (q.v.) to America and was settled over the German Reformed Church in Lancaster, Penn., till 1758, then labored successively in Tulpehocken, Penn., Frederick, Md. (1760 65), and York, Penn. (1765 74), after which he organized and had charge of the Evangelical Reformed Church of Baltimore. At Lancaster he instituted prayer meetings, trained laymen as leaders, held evangelistic services in the open air, and was in close fellowship with ministers of other denominations, especially Martin B6hm, a Mennonite, and Francis Asbury and Richard Wright, Methodists. In 1784 he assisted Dr. Coke in consecrating Asbury bishop. On Sept. 25, 1800, in conjunction with B6hm, he convened a conference of thirteen ministers near Frederick, which resulted in the organization of the Church of the United Brethren in Christ. He never left the German Reformed communion, and only desired to secure a reorganization of the methods in vogue within the Church. Otterbein University, at Westerville, 0., under the control of the United Brethren, preserves his name.
BIBLIO(3aAPHY: A Life was written by A. W. Drury, Dayton, Ohio, 1884. Consult: H. Harbaugh, Fathers of the German Reformed Church, 5 vols., Lancaster, Pa., 1857 sqq.; F. Piper and H. M. MacCracken. Lives of the Leaders of our Church Universal, Bethlehem, Pa., 1879; J. H. Dobbs, in American Church History Series, viii. 305313, New York, 1895; D. Berger, in the same, Ini. 317 sqq., ib. 1897. OTTLEY, EDWARD BICKERSTETH : Church of England; b. at Richmond (40 m. n.w. of York), Yorkshire, Jan. 18, 1853. He received his education at Merchant Tailors' School, London, and Keble College, Oxford (B.A. 1876; M.A., 1879); was made deacon in 1876 and priest in 1878; was curate at Hawarden, 1876 80, and at St. Saviour, Hoxton, 1880; principal of Sarum Theological College, 1880 83; vicar of the Church of the Annunciation (formerly Quebec Chapel), St. Marylebone, 1883 1908; Prebendary of Caddington Major in St. Paul's Cathedral, 1905 07; residentiary canon
RELIGIOUS ENCYCLOPEDIA
Otte
Otto of Bombers
of Rochester, since 1907. He has written Rational Aspects of Some Revealed Truths (London, 1887).
OTTLEY, HENRY BICKERSTETH : Church of England, brother of the preceding; b. at Richmond (40 m. n.w. of York), Yorkshire, Nov. 3, 1850. He received his education at St. John's College, Oxford (B.A., 1874; M.A., 1876); was made deacon in 1874 and priest in 1876; was curate of All Souls, Langham Place, London, 18741876; vicar of Newton on Trent, 1876 79; of St. Margaret's, Ilkley, 1879 83; and of Horsham, 1884 57; rector of West Hackney, 1887 90; vicar of Eastbourne, 1890 9$; and of South Norwood, 1898 1907; and honorary canon of Canterbury, 1907. He also served as commissary to the bishop of Jerusalem, 1887 96; special missioner for the Armenian relief fund, 1896; and as Golden lecturer at St. Margaret's, Lothbury, 1898 99. He is the author of: The Great Dilemma: Christ his own Witness or his own Accuser (London, 1881); The Challenge to the Church of God: " Give us a Reason of your Hope " (1882); Modern Egypt; its Witness to Christ (1884); The Seven Voices of the Cross (1886); Christ and Modern Life (1894); Map of the Armenian Massacres (1896); Christ in the City: some Elements of Religion in Common Life (1899); Great Solemnity: Lessons from the Sacring of the King (1902); Baptism and National Life (1904); The Christian Sunday: a Manual of Prayer and Instruction (1907).
OTTLEY, ROBERT LAWRENCE:Church of England; b. at Richmond (22 m. n.w: of Ripon), Yorkshire, Sept. 2, 1856. He was educated at Pembroke College, Oxford (B.A., 1878), and Christ Church, Oxford (M.A., 1881), where he was student in 1879 86 and tutor in 188386. He was ordered deacon in 1881 and ordained priest two years later. He was vice principal of Cuddesdon College (1886 90), after which he was dean of divinity in Magdalen College, Oxford (1890 93), fellow and tutor of Magdalen, as well as principal of Pusey House, Oxford (189397), rector of Winterbourne Bassett (1897 1903), was appointed canon of Christ Church, Oxford, and regius professor of pastoral theology in the University of Oxford (1903), both which dignities he still retains. He was also examining chaplain to the bishops of Durham (1884 87) and Oxford (1890 93), select preacher at the University of Oxford (1889 90), and Bampton lecturer in 1897. Since 1904 he has been examining chaplain in England to the bishop of St. John's, Kaffraria. Besides contributing the essay on Christian Ethics to Lux mundi (London, 1889), he has written Lancelot Andrewea (London, 1894); The Doctrine of the Incarnation (2 vols., 1896); Aspects of the Old Testament (1897); The Hebrew Prophets (1898); Short History of the Hebrews (Cambridge, 1902); The Religion of Israel (1905); and Christian Ideas and Ideals. An Outline of Christian Ethical Theory (1909).
OTTO OF BAMBERG: Apostle of Pomerania; b. in Swabia about 1060; d. at Bamberg (33 m. n. of Nuremberg) June 30, 1139. Destined for the Church in early life, he came while still a young man to the court of the Polish Duke Ladislaus,
Otto of eamberTTHE NEW SCHAFF HERZOG 288
Otto whose service he exchanged before 1090 for that of
the Emperor Henry IV. He seems to have become
chancellor in 1101, and in the following year bishop
were still reverenced beside the German God. Three
years later, therefore, Otto returned to Pomerania,
ransoming a number of captives at Demmin on the
Mecklenburg boundary, and converting all the
nobles of the land by a powerful sermon at Usedom.
Founding new churches at Wolgast and GUtzkow,
and strengthening the faith at Stettin and Julin,
he returned to Bamberg about Christmas, where he
discharged his duties as bishop and prince until his
death. (A. HAucg.)
Brnwoaasray: Sources are: Eocebard.Chronicon, in MGH.
Script., vi (1884), 263; Rdotio de piis openbus Ottonis, in
MGH, Script., zv (1888), 1151 8. Vita and. other docu
ments are collected in MGH, Script., ni (1856), 721 919
and in ASS, July, i. 349 18b. Consult: J. Zimmerman,
Der Wipe Otto, BiscAofoon Bamberp and Aposkt der Pom
mern, Freiburg, 1875; J. Looeborn, Der heilipe Ono, Mu
nich, 1880; M. J. HSfner, Otto 1. Bischo) von Bamberg in
winem Verhdltniese su Heinrich Y. and Loaar Ill., Giee
sen. 1868; L. Hofman,Otto 1. episcopua Bamberpsnsis,
Halle, 1869; J. N. Seefried, Otto des Herlipen, Bischo)s
con Bamberg and Apostels der Posemern, Herkunft and
Seimat, Augsburg, 1886; G. F. Maclear, Apostles of Me
dimml Europe, London, 1888; G. Juritsch, Oeschichte des
Bischo)s Otto 1. von Bamberg, des Pommern Apostels (1101
1189). Gotha,1889; A. Ulmer, Die demdipe Bened"ner
AbW Michdabem Au Bamberg, pp. 38 122, Bamberg, 1889;
W. Wig, GesehicW der chr"Wm $irehe in Pom
mwn sur Wendenceit, Berlin, 1889.
OTTO OF FREISING: Bishop of that city; b.
between 1111 and 1115; d. at the monastery of
Morimund (at Morimont, diocese of Langres, Burgundy) Sept. 22, 1158. Of noble lineage on both sides, he was destiaedwhile still a child for the Church and was appointed abbot of Mosterneuburg near Vienna. The income thus obtained enabled him to study for several years in Paris and to acquire all the knowledge of the time; though it is not known who his teachers were, despite the evident influence exercised on him by Gilbert de la Porr6e, whom he must have visited at Chartres. He was also acquainted with the writings of Hugo of St. Victor, whom he may have heard at Paris. On his return from France, Otto with fifteen noteworthy clericals visited the Cistercian monastery of Morimund and there, early in 1134, all entered the order. Within a short time, though not before the latter half of 1136, Otto was chosen abbot; but on the death of Henry, bishop of Freising, Oct. 9, 1137, the canons of Freising elected Otto to be his successor. In the following year he went to Freising and was consecrated. In 1143 46, during the troubled reign of Conrad III., Otto wrote his eight books of chronicles, which he entitled De duabua civitatibua (ed. R. Wilmans, MGH, Script., xx., 1868, pp. 83 sqq.), implying the conflict of the city of God against the city of the devil. Herein Otto followed Augustine, and his second model was Orosius. The chronicle runs from the creation to 1146 in seven books, the chief sources being Orosius, the church history of Eusebius (as translated by Rufinus), and the chronicle of Frutolf Ekkehard to the year 1106. The unique feature of the work was the search for the cause and effect as contrasted with the mere series of events set forth by other chroniclers. An eighth book on antichrist. and the last judgment is appended.
In 1147 48, Otto took part in the disastrous crusade of Conrad III., commanding a division which separated from the main army and marched through the coast countries of Asia Minor, where it was annihilated. Impoverished and undergoing the extremest hardships, the bishop escaped to a maritime town, whence he sailed to Palestine, visited Jerusalem and other sacred places, and apparently returned to France with Louis VII. It is certain, at all events, that he was with Bernard of Clairvaux in 1150, from whom he carried a letter to Conrad. After Otto 's return to Germany, war with the Guelphs broke out anew, but with the accession of Frederick I., in 1152, the long struggle was ended; and Otto, who had worked zealously for peace, was employed in the cares of state even more frequently than in the preceding reign. From 1157 until his death Otto wrote the two books of the history of his nephew, the Emperor Frederick I.; the first book narrating the events from the beginning of the struggle between emperor and pope under Henry IV. to the death of Conrad III., and the second extending from 1152 to the autumn of 1156; the whole forming a work of distinct value.
When, in the summer of 1158, the emperor went with a great army through Italy, he detached Otto, who went to France to attend the general council of the Cistercians. On the way he visited his old monastery of morimund, where he fell sick and died. His Geata Friderici 1. (ed. G, Waitz in Scriptores
RELIGIOUS ENCYCLOPEDIA
289
rerum Germanicarum, Hanover, 1884) was given for
continuation to his chaplain, the Freising Canon
Rahewin; and the last two books of this history,
therefore, received from Otto, at most, only Pre
liminary collections of material. Otto was of an
amiable character and his position on all questions
been the case had he lived until the schism of 1159.
Strict Cistercian though he was, he established in
his diocese one Premonatratensian and two Bene
dictine monasteries; and to him is also due the
honor of having introduced the study of philosophy
into Freising. (O. HOLDER EGGER.)
BIBLIOGRAPHY: A rich list of MSS., editions, and literature is given in Potthast, Wegweieer, pp. 887. The beat source for a life is MGH, Script., ix (1851), 610 611. Consult: R. Wilman's introduction to the edition in MGH, ut sup.; idem, in Archiv far dltere deutsche Liftenttur, x. 131 173, zi. 18 76; B. Huber, Otto von Preiain®: rein Charakter, aein Verhdltniaa zu seiner Zeit and ae%nen ZeiVenoasen alt ihr Geschichtachreiber, Munich, 1847; L. Lang, Paychotopiache Charakteriatik Otto# von PreiaiM, Augsburg, 1852; H. Grotefend, Der Werth der Gesta Friderici des Bischofa Otto von Preiainp far die Geschichte des Reicha unter Priedrich 1., Hanover, 1870; T. Soreenfrey, Zur Charakteristik des Otto von Freising als Geschichtachre0er, Greis, 1873; W. v. Giesebrecht, Geschichte der deutachen %aiserzeit, iv. 394 399, Brunswick, 1877; W. Lildeeke, Der hiatorasche Wert des erden Buchea von Ottoa von Preising Gesta Priderici, Halls, 1884; E. Vacandard, in Revue des questions historiquea, xxxv (1884), 52 114; E. Bernheim, Mittheaunpen des Institute fiir 6aterreichiache Geschichtefor'schunp, vi (1885), 1 51; J. Schmidlin, Die geschichtaphilosophische and kirrhenpolitische Weltanschauung Ottoa von Preising, Freiburg, 1906; Hauck, HD, iv. 476 eqq.
OTTO OF PASSAU: Franciscan; d. not before
1386. He is noteworthy for his book entitled Die
vierundzwanzig Ablksee, one of the popular devo
tional anthologies of the last centuries Of the Middle
Ages (cf. W. Wackernagel, Deutsche Litteraturge
schichte, pp. 334, 353, Basel, 1848). Of Otto himself
is known only what he tells in his preface, where he
styles himself a humble brother, Otto of Passau, of
the order of St. Francis, sometime lector at Basel,