His life may be divided into four parts: his youth and cloister life (1488–1505); his wanderings in pursuit of knowledge (1504–1515); his strife with
Ulrich of Württemberg (1515–1519); and his connection with the Reformation (1510–1523). However his burgher patrons could not tolerate the poet's airs and vanity and ill-timed assertions of his higher rank. Wherefore Hutten left Greifswald, and as he went was robbed of clothes and books, his only baggage, by the servants of his late friends. In the dead of winter, half starved, frozen, penniless, he reached
Rostock. In Rostock, again the humanists received him gladly, and under their protection he wrote against his Greifswald patrons, thus beginning the long list of his satires and fierce attacks on personal or public foes. Rostock could not hold him long, and he wandered on to Wittenberg, where in 1511 he published his
Ars Versificatoria, a work on
versification. His next stop was Leipzig, and thence to Vienna, where he hoped to win the emperor
Maximilian's favour by an elaborate national poem on the war with
Venice. But neither Maximilian nor the
University of Vienna would lift a hand for him. So Hutten went on to Italy, and settled at
Pavia to study law. In 1512, his studies were interrupted by war: in the siege of Pavia by papal troops and Swiss, he was plundered by both sides, and escaped, sick and penniless, to
Bologna. On his recovery, he served for a short time as a private soldier in the emperor's army, but by 1514 was back in Germany. Thanks to his poetic gifts and the friendship of Eitelwolf von Stein (d. 1515), he won the favour of the
elector of Mainz, Archbishop
Albert of Brandenburg. Here high dreams of a learned career rose on him: Mainz should be made the metropolis of a grand humanist movement, the centre of good style and literary form.
Strife with Ulrich of Württemberg But the murder in 1515 of his relative Hans von Hutten by
Ulrich, duke of Württemberg changed the whole course of Hutten's life; satire became his weapon. With one hand he took his part in the famous
Epistolæ Obscurorum Virorum (The Letters of Obscure Men), and with the other launched scathing letters, eloquent Ciceronian orations, or biting satires against the duke. These works made him known throughout Germany.
Epistolæ Obscurorum Virorum was written in support of Hutten's mentor, the prominent theologian
Johannes Reuchlin, who was engaged in a struggle to prevent the confiscation of Hebrew texts.
Epistolæ contained a series of fictitious letters, addressed to
Hardwin von Grätz, that sarcastically attacked the scholastic theologians who were acting against Reuchlin. Hutten went again to Italy to take the degree of doctor of laws, and returned to Germany in 1517. There the emperor took him under his protection and bestowed on him the honors of a poet's laureate crown and knighthood. However, he also spared Ulrich, duke of Württemberg. While in Italy, Hutten conceived a fierce hatred for the papacy, which he bitterly attacked in his preface to an edition of Laurentius Valla's
De Donatione Constantini, published in 1517. He thus helped prepare the way for
Martin Luther. In 1518, Hutten accompanied his patron, Archbishop Albert, on several official journeys to
Paris and to the
Diet of Augsburg, where Luther had his famous conference with
Thomas Cajetan. Subsequently, Hutten established a small
printing press, and published
pamphlets written in the
German language attacking the Pope and the Roman clergy.
Participation in the Reformation ,
Ufenau island:
St Peter & Paul church, where Ulrich von Hutten is buried Archbishop Albert denounced him at Rome, whereupon in 1519 Hutten became a supporter of Luther and his calls for religious reform. Unlike Luther, Hutten tried to enforce reformation by military means when he, along with
Franz von Sickingen attempted to begin a popular crusade within the Holy Roman Empire against the power of the Roman Catholic Church in favour of Luther's reformed religion. In what is known as the Knights' Revolt, they attacked the lands of the
Archbishop of Trier in 1522. The archbishop held out, however, and the knights were eventually defeated in 1523, destroying them as a significant political force within the empire. Following his defeat, Hutten tried to convince
Erasmus of Rotterdam to side with the Reformation. Erasmus refused to take sides. Their estrangement culminated in a literary quarrel between the two humanists. Hutten's
Ulrichi ab Hutten cum Erasmo Rotirodamo, Presbytero, Theologo, Expostulatio is a collection of his arguments against Erasmus; it was printed by
Johannes Schott from
Strasbourg in 1523. It contains a woodcut of Hutten and Erasmus; it was thought (in 1850) to be the earliest known woodcut of the latter. Erasmus refused to see Hutten when the latter came to
Basel in 1523, ill and impoverished, to see him. Hutten died in seclusion on the island of
Ufenau on
Lake Zurich. ==Health issues==