Education
He graduated from there in 1321, and then worked as a Provincial from 1328-1336 for Thuringia and Saxony.
He graduated from there in 1321, and then worked as a Provincial from 1328-1336 for Thuringia and Saxony.
He should be distinguished from Henry of Friemar "the Elder". At an early age he entered the Order of Hermits of Saint Augustine, and was sent to the University of Paris. Later (1342-1350) he served as Magister regens in the monastery of Saint Thomas, Prague.
Until his death in 1354 he lived, together with his namesake Henry of Friemar "the Elder", in the Augustinian monastery in Erfurt.
His printed works are:
Opus Sermonum Exactissimorum De Sanctis
De Quadruplici Instinctu, Divino, Angelico, Diabolico, et Humano (Venice, 1498. Parma, 1514) (Treatise on the Four Impulses)
Additiones Ad Libros Sententiarum (Cologne, 1513)
De Spiritibus, Eorumque Discretione
Tractatus De Beatae, Mariae Virginis Conceptione (Louvain, 1664)
De Origine Fratrum Eremitarum Sancti Augustini.