He fell ill around
Pentecost 1547 following which he travelled to
Wildbad to cure himself. The stay was not successful and, still gravely sick, he eventually arrived in Strasbourg on 14 July. the
Rerum Germanicarum Libri III (1531), and editions of
Velleius Paterculus (Froben, Basel, 1520), based on the sole surviving manuscript, which he discovered in the Benedictine monastery at
Murbach, Alsace. He also wrote works on
Tacitus (1519),
Livy (1522), and a nine-volume work on his friend
Erasmus (1540–1541). Beatus Rhenanus's collection of books went into the ownership of his hometown on his death, and can still to be seen in its entirety in the
Humanist Library of Sélestat. Four years after his death,
Johannes Sturm wrote a biography of him. == Personal life ==