Biobibliographien Gothaer Geowissenschaftler
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German Historical Institute London Bulletin Vol 23 (2001), No. 1
German Historical Institute London Bulletin Volume XXIII, No. 1 May 2001 CONTENTS Seminars 3 Review Article Raiding the Storehouse of European Art: National Socialist Art Plunder during the Second World War (Ines Schlenker) 5 Debate Stefan Berger responds to Ulrich Muhlack 21 Book Reviews I. S. Robinson, Henry IV of Germany, 1056-1106 (Hanna Vollrath) 34 Gerd Althoff, Spielregeln der Politik im Mittelalter: Kommuni- kation in Frieden und Fehde (Timothy Reuter) 40 William Gervase Clarence-Smith, Cocoa and Chocolate, 1765-1914 (Andreas Eckert) 48 L. G. Mitchell, Lord Melbourne 1779-1848 (Patrick Bahners) 53 Wolfgang Piereth, Bayerns Pressepolitik und die Neuordnung Deutschlands nach den Befreiungskriegen (Michael Rowe) 65 Margit Szöllösi-Janze, Fritz Haber 1868-1934: Eine Biographie (Raymond Stokes) 71 Gesine Krüger, Kriegsbewältigung und Geschichtsbewußtsein: Realität, Deutung und Verarbeitung des deutschen Kolonial- kriegs in Namibia 1904 bis 1907 (Tilman Dedering) 76 Contents Kurt Flasch, Die geistige Mobilmachung: Die deutschen Intellektuellen und der Erste Weltkrieg. Ein Versuch (Roger Chickering) 80 Notker Hammerstein, Die Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft in der Weimarer Republik und im Dritten Reich: Wissenschafts- politik in Republik und Diktatur; Michael Fahlbusch, Wissen- schaft im Dienst der nationalsozialistischen Politik? Die ‘Volksdeutschen Forschungsgemeinschaften’ von 1931-1945 (Paul Weindling) 83 Peter Strunk, Zensur und Zensoren: Medienkontrolle und Propagandapolitik unter sowjetischer Besatzungsherrschaft in Deutschland (Patrick Major) 89 Paul Nolte, Die Ordnung der deutschen Gesellschaft: Selbstent- wurf und Selbstbeschreibung im 20. Jahrhundert (Thomas Rohrkrämer) 93 Noticeboard 98 Library News 111 Recent Acquisitions 2 SEMINARS AT THE GHIL SUMMER 2001 15 May PROFESSOR GÜNTHER HEYDEMANN (Leipzig) The Revolution of 1989/90 in the GDR—Recent Research Günther Heydemann has published widely on European history of the nineteenth century and the twentieth-century German dictator- ships. -
University Town of Tübingen
University Town of Tübingen Report on the application of Tübingen for the UNESCO World Heritage List Gutachten zur Bewerbung Tübingens um Aufnahme in die UNESCO-Welterbeliste (Englische Fassung) Prof. em. Dr. Dr. h.c. Willem Frijhoff Erasmus University Rotterdam / VU-University, Amsterdam) Report on the application of Tübingen for the UNESCO World Heritage List View from the Österberg across the historic city centre to Hohentübingen Castle Blick vom Österberg über die Altstadt zum Schloss Hohentübingen 2 Report on the application of Tübingen for the UNESCO World Heritage List Preamble This report has been written to substantiate the candidacy of the city of Tübingen (Baden-Württemberg, Germany) for the inclusion on the World Heritage List as the very model of a ‘university town’.* Many cities of Euro- pe and the Americas can rightfully boast of the richness of their historical legacy in matters of higher education and university life. Besides Tübingen, several other European towns owe their reputation to the preservation of a large number of historical buildings related to their university: Paris, Bolog- na, Oxford and Cambridge, Salamanca, Prague, Vilnius, Coimbra, Louvain, Uppsala and Alcalá de Henares, or outside Europe México City, Williams- burg (Virginia), even the modern Ciudad Universitaria of Caracas (placed on the World Cultural Heritage list in 2000). Just like Tübingen, other Ger- man towns such as Marburg, Heidelberg, Göttingen, Freiburg, Wittenberg, Helmstedt, Erfurt, Ingolstadt, Leipzig or Jena still possess many older or newer buildings attesting to their historical importance as towns endowed with a university. Even so, very few among them unite the prerequisites for “…Tübingen holds an unparalleled a nomination to the World Heritage List as a ‘university town’ in the fullest place because of the exceptional and most comprehensive sense of the word. -
Journalistic Cartography
ized course in cartography was offered on a regular ba- sis, a rarity at that time. During his career he published what he was to call “the six-six world map giving larger, better continents” (Jefferson 1930). This eliminated J much ocean, allowing larger landmasses, and became popular in the classroom. It is probable that Jefferson taught more than 10,000 Jefferson, Mark Sylvester William. Mark Sylvester students, of whom 80 percent became teachers who fur- William Jefferson was born the seventh child of Daniel ther spread the cartographic habit. Most distinguished and Mary Jefferson on 1 March 1863 in Melrose, Mas- among these students were Isaiah Bowman, R D Calkins, sachusetts. His father, a lover of literature, nurtured the Charles C. Colby, Darrell Haug Davis, William M. Greg- young Mark, who became a member of the class of 1884 ory, George J. Miller, and A. E. Parkins. Of these, Bow- at Boston University. Academic success led to his ap- man, Colby, and Parkins were elected to the presidency pointment (1883–86) as assistant to Benjamin Apthorp of the Association of American Geographers, an honor Gould, director and astronomer of the National Ob- accorded Jefferson in 1916. When Bowman became di- servatory of the Argentine Republic at Cordoba, mem- rector of the American Geographical Society in 1915, he bership in the Argentine Geographical Society (1885), corresponded vigorously with his former teacher, whom and management of a sugar estate in Tucuman Province he invited to head the 1:1,000,000-scale Hispanic map (1886–89). Jefferson returned to Massachusetts, taught project of the Society. -
9. Gundolf's Romanticism
https://www.openbookpublishers.com © 2021 Roger Paulin This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0). This license allows you to share, copy, distribute and transmit the text; to adapt the text and to make commercial use of the text providing attribution is made to the authors (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work). Attribution should include the following information: Roger Paulin, From Goethe to Gundolf: Essays on German Literature and Culture. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers, 2021, https://doi.org/10.11647/OBP.0258 Copyright and permissions for the reuse of many of the images included in this publication differ from the above. Copyright and permissions information for images is provided separately in the List of Illustrations. In order to access detailed and updated information on the license, please visit, https://doi.org/10.11647/OBP.0258#copyright Further details about CC-BY licenses are available at, https://creativecommons.org/ licenses/by/4.0/ All external links were active at the time of publication unless otherwise stated and have been archived via the Internet Archive Wayback Machine at https://archive.org/web Updated digital material and resources associated with this volume are available at https://doi.org/10.11647/OBP.0258#resources Every effort has been made to identify and contact copyright holders and any omission or error will be corrected if notification is made to the publisher. ISBN Paperback: 9781800642126 ISBN Hardback: 9781800642133 ISBN Digital (PDF): 9781800642140 ISBN Digital ebook (epub): 9781800642157 ISBN Digital ebook (mobi): 9781800642164 ISBN Digital (XML): 9781800642171 DOI: 10.11647/OBP.0258 Cover photo and design by Andrew Corbett, CC-BY 4.0. -
Thiers Et Le Baron Cotta. Étude Sur La Collaboration De Thiers À La Gazette
ROBERT MARQUANT . THIERS ET LE BARON COTTA TRAVAUX ET MÉMOIRES DES INSTITUTS FRANÇAIS EN ALLEMAGNE 7 - ROBERT MARQUANT THIERS ET LE BARON COTTA ÉTUDE SUR LA COLLABORATION DE THIERS A LA GAZETTE D'AUGSBOURG 1959 PRESSES UNIVERSITAIRES DE FRANCE . PARIS 108, BOULEVARD SAINT-GERMAIN INTRODUCTION Les relations entre Thiers et Cotta sont demeurées peu connues jusqu'à présent. Elles ont toujours gardé aux yeux des contempo- rains un caractère secret et ce silence devait persister longtemps encore après la mort de Thiers, grâce aux précautions prises de leur vivant par les intéressés. Il devenait gênant, au surplus, de rappeler dans les ouvrages écrits après la guerre de 1870-71 en l'honneur du «Libérateur du Territoire», que c'était à un Allemand qu'il devait, pour une bonne part, la notoriété et les premiers succès acquis sous la Restauration, au temps de sa jeunesse. Ces rapports qui durèrent presque dix ans, de novembre 1823 à la mort de Cotta en 1832, eurent deux aspects. Thiers accepta, en effet, de servir d'homme de paille à l'éditeur allemand pour cer- taines affaires de presse menées en France, tandis que par ailleurs il fournissait régulièrement à la Gazelle d'Augsbourg une correspon- dance parisienne. Le secret semble avoir été plus soigneusement gardé dans ce dernier domaine que dans le premier. La collaboration à la Gazelle d'Augsbourg et la correspondance adressée par Thiers à Cotta, qui en est la base, sont demeurées réellement inconnues jusqu'à une date récente. Le premier travail qui signale cette chronique est celui de Schâffle sur Cotta 1 en 1895, puis vient l'étude de Heyck sur la Gazelle d'Augsbourg 2, parue en 1898. -
Robert Schumann a Youth Pilgrimage to Munich 1828
Robert Schumann Youth Pilgrimage Robert Schumann A Youth Pilgrimage to Munich 1828 Robert Schumann Youth Pilgrimage Introduction The young Schumann’s original sheets titled “Jünglings-Wallfarthen [Youth Pilgrimages]”, which he wrote down as a student in Heidelberg in 1830, are held at the Robert Schumann House in Zwickau. The nine journeys made between 1826 and 1830 took him to the following places: 1. Journey to Gotha, Eisenach, Weimar, Jena, 1826 2. Journey to Prague, 1827 3. Journey to Munich through Bavaria, 1828 4. Journey on the Rhine up to Heidelberg, 1829 5. Journey through Switzerland up to Venice, 1829 6. Journey through Baden to Strasbourg, 1830 7. Journey through Hesse to Frankfurt, 1830 8. Schwetzingen, Speyer, Worms and Rhenish Bavaria (Palatinate), 1830 9. Journey on the Rhine to Wesel and through Westphalia to Leipzig, 1830 The subsequent seven pages of prose text were titled “Erstes Gemählde. Reise nach Prag [First Picture. Journey to Prague]” but broke off in the middle of a sentence describing Colditz Castle. Unfortunately, Schumann never again got around to writing out his diary, kept in the form of keywords, as a continuous travel report. The slightly abridged version of Pilgrimage No. 3 below only covers the period between his departure from Zwickau and his stay in Munich. Legal notice Concept: Walter Müller, CH-8320 Fehraltorf Design/ prepress/print: Bucherer Druck AG, 8620 Wetzikon Photographs: Walter Müller Issue: July 2015 Robert Schumann Youth Pilgrimage Zwickau–Bayreuth Diary of Robert Schumann [Thursday, 24th April: Zwickau (departure early 01:00) – Plauen – Hof – reunion with Rosen1 – arrival Bayreuth evening 19:30 (Goldene Sonne Inn mediocre) Travel time: Zwickau–Hof 12 hours, Hof–Bayreuth 15 hours Friday, 25th April: Jean Paul’s tomb2 – deep pain – Rollwenzel Inn3 – Jean Paul’s study4 and chair – Hermitage5 – fond memory of Jean Paul – stroll to Fantasie Palace6 – monuments] 1 Gisbert Rosen, youth friend of Schumann, who started to study law together with him at the University of Leipzig. -
HUNTIA a Journal of Botanical History
HUNTIA A Journal of botanical History VolUme 13 NUmber 2 2007 Hunt Institute for botanical Documentation Carnegie mellon University Pittsburgh The Hunt Institute for botanical Documentation, a research division of Carnegie mellon University, specializes in the history of botany and all aspects of plant science and serves the international scientific community through research and documentation. To this end, the Institute acquires and maintains authoritative collections of books, plant images, manuscripts, portraits and data files, and provides publications and other modes of information service. The Institute meets the reference needs of botanists, biologists, historians, conservationists, librarians, bibliographers and the public at large, especially those concerned with any aspect of the North American flora. Huntia publishes articles on all aspects of the history of botany, including exploration, art, literature, biography, iconography and bibliography. The journal is published irregularly in one or more numbers per volume of approximately 200 pages by the Hunt Institute for botanical Documentation. external contributions to Huntia are welcomed. Page charges have been eliminated. All manuscripts are subject to external peer review. before submitting manuscripts for consideration, please review the “Guidelines for Contributors,” which are available on our Web site or by request. Direct editorial correspondence to the editor. Send books for announcement or review to the book reviews and Announcements editor. The subscription rate is $60.00 per volume. Send orders for subscriptions and back issues to the Institute. Hunt Institute Associates may elect to receive Huntia as a benefit of membership; contact the Institute for more information. Hunt Institute for botanical Documentation Carnegie mellon University 5000 Forbes Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890 Telephone: 412-268-2434 email: [email protected] Web site: http://huntbot.andrew.cmu.edu/ HIbD/Publications/HI-Pubs/Pub-Huntia.shtml editor and layout Scarlett T. -
Race and Ethnicity
RACE AND ETHNICITY: SLAVERY AND THE GERMAN RADICAL TRADITION Talk given by Hartmut Keil in Madison, Wisconsin on February 3, 1999 and sponsored by the Max Kade Institute for German-American Studies and the Center for the History of Print Culture. Traditionally racial and ethnic relations in mid-nineteenth century America have been described as dominated by antagonism, hatred, and violence that often erupted into mob action, lynchings, and murders of black Americans. The standard explanation for this hostile record has been that these ethnic groups had similar socio-economic status and competed for the same jobs in the labor market. Previous research1 implies that this stereotypical view was largely shaped by studying the Irish as the largest and most visible immigrant group. It has raised substantial doubt, however, as to the applicability of this model to the second largest immigrant group, i.e. the Germans, arriving before the Civil War. Although German immigrants also subscribed to the ideology of nineteenth-century racism, it often found different and less confrontational expression among them than among the Irish. The larger project that I have been pursuing for some time now intends to take a closer look at the kinds of relationship that developed between African Americans and German immigrants. My talk today will isolate the specific issue of mutual intellectual traditions and a common philosophical heritage that may account for sympathy for abolitionism and antislavery sentiment among parts of the German immigrant population. I suggest that European and American Enlightenment thought evolved not in isolation, but through an intense exchange of ideas that crossed the Atlantic in both directions. -
Thomas Nehrlich Sensationsfund Oder Falsche Fährte? Über Einen „Brief an Kleist“ in Der ‚Berner Ausgabe‘ Von Alexander Von Humboldts „Schriften“
Zeitschrift für Germanistik Neue Folge XXVIII – 3/2018 Herausgeberkollegium Ulrike Vedder (Geschäftsführende Herausgeberin, Berlin) Mark-Georg Dehrmann (Berlin) Alexander Košenina (Hannover) Steffen Martus (Berlin) Gastherausgeberin Anne-Kathrin Reulecke (Graz) Sonderdruck PETER LANG Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften Bern · Berlin · Bruxelles · New York · Oxford · Warszawa · Wien 604 Neue Materialien THOMAS NEHRLICH Sensationsfund oder falsche Fährte? Über einen „Brief an Kleist“ in der ‚Berner Ausgabe‘ von Alexander von Humboldts „Schriften“ Die Edition von Humboldts Schriften1 macht nächst wird ersichtlich, in wie großer Zahl Hum - nicht nur die zahlreichen Publikationen wieder boldts Briefe zu seinen Lebzeiten in Periodica verfügbar, die seine Zeitgenossen rezipierten. Auf ver öffent licht wurden, ob auf seine Veranlassung der Grundlage seiner nicht in Buchform, son- oder als eigendynamische Zirkulation seines dern ‚unselbständig‘ erschienenen Texte können Ruhms. Außerdem werden Humboldts Publi ka- außerdem seine wissenschaftlichen, literarischen tionsstra tegien nachvollziehbar: Mit einer ganzen und publizistischen Netzwerke rekonstruiert wer- Reihe von Briefen, die er an Redaktionen und Her- 2 den: Humboldts Aufsätze, Artikel und Essays ausgeber in Europa zur Veröffentlichung schick te, sind mit anderen Co-Autoren entstanden als seine konnte er gleich sam ‚live‘ von seiner Amerika- Bücher, so z. B. mit Jean-Baptiste Biot, Jean-Claude Reise 1799–1804 berichten, während er selbst Delamétherie, Antoine François de Fourcroy, -
German Writers on German Opera, 1798–1830
! "# $ % & % ' % !"# $!%$! &#' !' "(&(&()(( *+*,(-!*,(."(/0 ' "# ' '% $$(' $(#1$2/ 3((&/ 14(/ Propagating a National Genre: German Writers on German Opera, 1798–1830 A Dissertation submitted to the Division of Graduate Studies and Research of the University of Cincinnati in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY In the Division of Composition, Musicology, and Theory of the College-Conservatory of Music 2010 by Kevin Robert Burke BM Appalachian State University, 2002 MM University of Cincinnati, 2004 Committee Chair: Dr. Mary Sue Morrow ABSTRACT Standard histories of Western music have settled on the phrase “German Romantic opera” to characterize German operatic developments in the early part of the nineteenth century. A consideration of over 1500 opera reviews from close to thirty periodicals, however, paints a more complex picture. In addition to a fascination with the supernatural, composers were drawn to a variety of libretti, including Biblical and Classical topics, and considered the application of recitative and other conventions most historians have overlooked because of their un-German heritage. Despite the variety of approaches and conceptions of what a German opera might look like, writers from Vienna to Kassel shared a common aspiration to develop a true German opera. The new language of concert criticism found from specialized music journals like the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung to the entertainment inserts of feuilletons like the Zeitung für die elegante Welt made the operatic endeavor of the early nineteenth century a national one rather than a regional one as it was in the eighteenth century. ii Copyright 2010, Kevin Robert Burke iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First, I would like to offer gratitude to all my colleagues, friends, and family who supported me with encouraging words, a listening ear, and moments of celebration at the end of each stage. -
Architectural History in the Architecture Academy: Wilhelm Stier (1799-1856) at the Bauakademie and Allgemeine Bauschule in Berlin
Architectural history in the architecture academy: Wilhelm Stier (1799-1856) at the Bauakademie and Allgemeine Bauschule in Berlin Eric Garberson Figure 1 Wilhelm Stier in Selinunte, 1828, lithograph. Universitäts- und Stadtbibliothek, Cologne, Inv. Nr. K5/120 (Photo: USB) Figure 2 Wilhelm Stier, collotype from Zeitschrift für Bauwesen 7 (1857), frontispiece. (Photo: Architekturmuseum, Technische Universität zu Berlin) Table of Contents Introduction ........................................................................................................................... 2 The first years of the Bauakademie and Hirt’s ‘Critical history of architecture’ ........ 17 The independent Bauakademie ......................................................................................... 25 Wilhelm Stier: youth, training, travel ............................................................................... 41 Düsseldorf, Cologne, and Bonn, 1817-1821 ................................................................. 43 Paris, 1821 ......................................................................................................................... 46 Rome, 1822-1827 .............................................................................................................. 50 Stier at the Bauakademie, 1828-1831 ................................................................................. 82 Beuth’s Reform of 1831-32 and Stier’s Professional Activities, 1832-1849 .................. 89 The Reform of 1848-1849 and Stier’s Last Years .......................................................... -
21 Tabelle in Der Reihenfolge Der Bearbeitung
Zeichner / Autor/ Entstanden / Bezeichnung Signatur der SBBPK Nr. Jahr Titel Herausgeber / gedruckt in des Meeres Gattung Drucker / Verlag Ritters geographisch- Japanisches KartLS3Bai10-1 1 1874 statistisches Lexikon über die Benjamin Ritter Deutschland Meer Lexikon, Stichwort Erdteile … Ritters geographisch- Japanisches HA14Db1749-1 2 1910 statistisches Lexikon über die Benjamin Ritter Deutschland Meer Lexikon, Stichwort Erdteile Ptolemäische Weltkarte der 2°Kart.28193 Faksimile 3 1477 Claudius Ptolemaeus Italien Kein Name Cosmographia Karte 1200, 2°Kart.28193 Faksimile 4 Tabula Peutingeriana unbekannt Deutschland Kein Name um Karte 2°Kart.28193 Faksimile 5 1076 Türkische Weltkarte Mahmud al-Kaschghari Türkei Kein Name Karte Ozean des Abu Abdallah 2°Kart.28193 Faksimile 6 1154 Charta Rogeriana Arabien Ostens (auf Muhammad Idrisi Karte arabisch) 2°Kart.28193 Faksimile 7 1364 Map oft the Five Indies Gotenjiku Zu Japan Kein Name Karte 2°Kart.28193 Faksimile 8 1502 Alberto Cantino-Weltkarte anonym Portugal Kein Name Karte Orbis typus universalis iuxta 2°Kart.28193 Faksimile 9 1513 Martin Waldseemüller Frankreich Kein Name hydrographorum traditionem Karte 2°Kart.28193 Faksimile 10 1529 Carta Uniuersal Diogo Ribeiro Spanien Kein Name Karte 2°Kart.28193 Faksimile 11 1567 Asiae orbis partium maximae Abraham Ortelius Belgien Kein Name Karte Asia ex magna orbis terrae 2°Kart.28193 Faksimile 12 1606 Gerhard Mercator jun. Niederlande Mare Cin descriptione Atlas 1598, Henricus Florentius van 2°Kart.28193 Faksimile 13 Asiae nova descriptio Niederlande