He was born in
Ludwigsburg, near
Stuttgart. At age 12 he was sent to the evangelical seminary at
Blaubeuren, near
Ulm, to be prepared for the study of theology. Two of the principal masters in the school were and
Ferdinand Christian Baur, who instilled in their pupils a deep appreciation for the ancient classics and the principles of textual criticism, which could be applied to texts in the sacred tradition as well as to classical ones. In 1825, Strauss entered the
Tübinger Stift. The professors of philosophy there failed to interest him, but the theories of
Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling,
Jakob Böhme,
Friedrich Schleiermacher and
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel successively claimed his allegiance. In 1830, he became an assistant to a country clergyman, and nine months later, he accepted the post of professor in the
Evangelical Seminaries of Maulbronn and Blaubeuren, where he would teach
Latin, history and
Hebrew. In October 1831, Strauss resigned his office to study under Schleiermacher and Hegel in Berlin. Hegel died just as he arrived, and though Strauss regularly attended Schleiermacher's lectures, it was only those on the life of Jesus that interested him. Strauss tried to find kindred spirits among the followers of Hegel but was not successful. While under the influence of Hegel's distinction between
Vorstellung and
Begriff, Strauss had already conceived the ideas found in his two principal theological works:
Das Leben Jesu (Life of Jesus) and
Christliche Glaubenslehre (
Christian Dogma). Hegelians generally would not accept his conclusions. In 1832, Strauss returned to Tübingen, lecturing on
logic,
Plato, the
history of philosophy and
ethics with great success. However, in the fall of 1833, he resigned, to devote all his time to the completion of his
Das Leben Jesu, published when he was 27 years old. The full original title of this work is
Das Leben Jesu kritisch bearbeitet (Tübingen: 1835–1836), and it was translated from the fourth German edition into English by
George Eliot (Marian Evans) (1819–1880) and published under the title
The Life of Jesus, Critically Examined (3 vols., London, 1846). Since the Hegelians in general rejected his
Life of Jesus, Strauss defended his work in a booklet,
Streitschriften zur Verteidigung meiner Schrift über das Leben Jesu und zur Charakteristik der gegenwärtigen Theologie (Tübingen: E. F. Osiander, 1837), which was finally translated into English by Marilyn Chapin Massey and published under the title ''In Defense of My 'Life of Jesus' Against the Hegelians
(Hamden, CT: Archon Books, 1983). The famous scholar Bruno Bauer led the attack of the Hegelians on Strauss, and Bauer continued to attack Strauss in academic journals for years. When young Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche began criticizing Strauss, Bauer gave Nietzsche every support that he could afford. In the third edition (1839) of Das Leben Jesu
, and in Zwei friedliche Blätter
(Two Peaceful Letters), Strauss made important concessions to his critics, some of which he withdrew, however, in the fourth edition (1840) of Das Leben Jesu''. ==
Das Leben Jesu==