Students from all over Europe came to Wittenberg University — more students, in fact, than any other German university during the Lutherian and Melanchthonian era. No wonder, then, that William Shakespeare had Hamlet study in Wittenberg. Not that Hamlet's studies in Wittenberg are central to the plot of the tragedy but rather, the most famous monologue in the history of theatre — "to be or not to be" — may have been influenced by somebody from Wittenberg, making Shakespeare's choice of Hamlet's university anything but arbitrary. In his textbook on logic ("Erotemata Dialectices"), Melanchthon discusses in detail the basic principle of logic: that something that is, cannot fail to be at the same time. To be or not to be: that is the question on both minds, Hamlet's and Melanchthon's. Or rather, that is the question that, without Melanchthon, Hamlet might never have asked.
Melanchthon and England
Students from all over Europe came to Wittenberg University — more students, in fact, than any other German university during the Lutherian and Melanchthonian era. No wonder, then, that William Shakespeare had Hamlet study in Wittenberg. Not that Hamlet's studies in Wittenberg are central to the plot of the tragedy but rather, the most famous monologue in the history of theatre — "to be or not to be" — may have been influenced by somebody from Wittenberg, making Shakespeare's choice of Hamlet's university anything but arbitrary. In his textbook on logic ("Erotemata Dialectices"), Melanchthon discusses in detail the basic principle of logic: that something that is, cannot fail to be at the same time. To be or not to be: that is the question on both minds, Hamlet's and Melanchthon's. Or rather, that is the question that, without Melanchthon, Hamlet might never have asked.