Das Buch der Makkabäer (The Book of the Maccabees)
Das Buch der Makkabaer
A verified public-domain excerpt for this text is still being set. The folio is catalogued and linked below; an original Sub Rosa rendering will follow.
What it is
This German verse translation of the Books of the Maccabees, composed in Prussia c. 1330, served the Teutonic Order as both a devotional text and an ideological apologia: the Maccabees were repeatedly invoked in Order chronicles as biblical typology for the crusading mission in Prussia, and the text itself was possibly composed by or at the instigation of Grand Master Luder von Braunschweig. Read at mealtimes in the Prussian commanderies, it taught brothers to understand their warfare against Baltic paganism as a continuation of biblical Israel's defensive holy war, providing a scriptural meditation framework for active military service.
Why it still matters
Its reflection on faithful endurance under persecution and confidence in God's ultimate vindication — the Maccabean theme — translates naturally into prayer for perseverance amid institutional or cultural opposition, a concern shared by many Christians today.
Kept alongside
Marienleben (Life of the Virgin Mary) of Bruder Philipp
Marienleben
Bruder Philipp, a Carthusian monk, dedicated his comprehensive verse Life of the Virgin Mary to the Teutonic Order specifically because 'They delight in honouring Mary and in propagating the Faith.' The Marienleben became the most widely distributed medieval German poem, with 99 surviving manuscripts in 121 libraries — many from Prussian Ordensburgen — confirming its deep penetration into Teutonic Order devotional culture. As the Order's patron saint was the Virgin Mary, this biography of her life served as both an act of Marian veneration and a theological primer on the Incarnation and Redemption for knights who could not access Latin sources.
Rule, Statutes, and Customs of the Teutonic Order (Deutschordensregel)
Regel, Gesetze und Gewohnheiten des Deutschen Ordens
The Teutonic Order's Rule, Statutes, and Customs is the foundational devotional and juridical text of the Order as a religious-military state in Prussia. Its devotional provisions are explicit: priest-brothers pray the full Divine Office from the breviary; lay brothers who cannot read Latin substitute Pater Nosters at each canonical hour — thirteen at Matins, nine at Vespers, seven at all other hours. Members receive communion on seven prescribed feast days annually and pray daily for benefactors and the deceased. The 1264 Middle German version (Central Archives of the Teutonic Order, Vienna) made the rule accessible to the vernacular-literate knights who governed Prussia.
Das Passional and Das Väterbuch
Das Passional; Das Väterbuch
These two companion verse collections — the Passional (nearly 110,000 rhyming verses in three books covering saints' lives, drawn principally from the Legenda aurea) and the Väterbuch (41,540 verses on the lives of the early desert fathers and monks) — were produced in the circle of the Teutonic Order at the end of the 13th century and widely distributed through its Prussian and German houses. The Passional and Väterbuch were read aloud at mealtimes in the Ordensburgen, fulfilling the Rule's requirement for edifying readings and serving as the primary hagiographical formation texts for German-speaking knight-brothers.