Joseph Von Hammer-Purgstall: Erinnerungen Und Briefe

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Joseph Von Hammer-Purgstall: Erinnerungen Und Briefe Diese PDF-Datei ist ein Teil von Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall: Erinnerungen und Briefe Version 1 2011.07 Briefe von 1790 bis Ende 1819 – 3 Bände, Graz 2011 Herausgegeben von Walter Höflechner und Alexandra Wagner Das Gesamtwerk findet sich unter: http://gams.uni-graz.at/hp – 1882 – 4 EIN VERZEICHNIS VON PUBLIKATIONEN UND MANUSKRIPTEN VON JOSEPH VON HAMMER(-PURGSTALL) Mit dem nachfolgenden Schriftenverzeichnis wird versucht, die selbstständigen und unselbstständigen Publikationen HPs einschließlich der von ihm verfassten Rezensionen und in Bibliographien genannten Manuskripte zu erfassen. Das Verzeichnis erhebt keinerlei Anspruch auf Vollständigkeit, ja nicht einmal auf gesicherte Korrektheit. Die ermittelten Angaben beruhen auf den in der Rubrik „Quellen“ genannten Vorlagen bzw. (wo nichts ausgewiesen ist) auf den im Internet im Wege von http://www.ubka.uni-karlsruhe.de/kvk.html zugänglichen Bibliotheks- katalogen. Den Publikationen selbst konnte nicht weiter nachgegangen werden. Da auch die modernen bibliothekarischen Angaben, wie sie sich z.B. im Karlsruher Virtuellen Katalog finden, mitunter Differenzen in der Titelerfassung aufweisen; kann, wie bereits angedeutet, nicht durchwegs der Anspruch auf ein einer Autopsie standhaltendes Zitat erhoben werden, da eine Autopsie nur in den wenigsten Fällen vorgeommen werden konnte. In bezug auf die Unvollständigkeit des Verzeichnisses ist darauf hinzuweisen, dass HP, wie er in seinen „Erinnerungen aus meinem Leben“ verschiedentlich angibt, aus den unterschiedlichsten Anlässen zahlreiche Gelegenheitsgedichte (vielfach Sonette) in den unterschiedlichsten Druckmedien veröffentlichte; ihnen konnte nicht weiter nachgegangen werden. Ebensowenig den offenbar nicht wenigen, vor allem in den späten Jahren (insbesondere ab 1848) auch in Tageszeitungen publizierten Stellungnahmen zu tagespolitischen Themen, die er nebenbei in den Erinnerungen erwähnt. In beiden Fällen handelte es sich um gezeichnete wie auch anonyme Veröffentlichungen. Auch hinsichtlich der zahlreichen Übersetzungen seiner großen Arbeiten (z.B. der Geschichte des Osmanischen Reiches) in zahlreiche Sprachen, die bis in die Gegenwart erscheinen; wurden keine spezifischen Nachforschungen angestellt; soweit sie aber im Zuge der Arbeit entdeckt wurden, wurden sie bei der Nennung der ersten Ausgabe bzw. des ersten Bandes des Werkes ausgwiesen. In jenen Fällen, in denen HP selbst (wie etwa bei der „Geschichte des Osmanischen Reiches“) eine weitere (gekürzte) Ausgabe herausgab, erscheint diese im betreffenden Jahr als eigenständiges Werk. Bei mehrbändigen Werken, deren Bände in Verlaufe mehrerer Jahre erscheinen (und jeweils in diesen aufgelistet sind), erscheint der vollständige Titel (soferne nicht einzelne Bände spezielle Titel tragen) stets nur beim ersten Band. Bei der Benützung zu bedenken ist auch, dass das Erscheinungsjahr nur bedingt etwas über den Zeitpunkt der Fertigstellung des Werkes aussagt, da einerseits die Zensur Zeit in Anspruch nahm und weiters HP selbst (wie im Falle seiner „Geschichte der arabischen Literatur“) u.U. zwei fertig gedruckte Bände von der Veröffentlichung – 1883 – zurückhielt (z.B. weil er sich bezüglich der Widmung unschlüssig war). Besonders zu beachten ist dieses Phänomen bei den Bänden der „Fundgruben des Orients“, deren Erscheinen in Gestalt von vier Heften sich über mehr als zwei Jahre hinziehen konnte. Die Titel der Beiträge in den „Fundgruben des Orients“ enthalten mitunter offenbar Druckfehler; diese wurden – um nicht irrige Korrekturen vorzunehmen – nicht berichtigt. Desgleichen ist die Paginierung fehlerhaft; es ist dazu das in diesem Anhang gegebene berichtigte Inhaltsverzeichnis der „Fundgruben des Orients“ zu vergleichen. Weiters ist zu bemerken, dass die „Fundgruben des Orients“ vermutlich weitere, hier nicht angeführte Beiträge enthalten, die von HP stammen dürften, die aber nicht gezeichnet und daher nicht als die seinigen erkennbar sind. H bezeichnet Hammer (vor 1835), HP Hammer-Purgstall (ab 1836). Weiters wurden folgende Abkürzungen verwendet: AlmWien = Almanach der Akademie der Wissenschaften Wien ALZ Halle = Allgemeine Literaturzeitung Halle ALZ Jena ErgBll = Ergänzungsblätter zur Jenaischen Allgemeinen Literaturzeitung AnzBl = Anzeigenblatt ArchGStLuK = Archiv für Geschichte, Statistik, Literatur und Kunst. BBAW = Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Akademiebibliothek BiblItaliana = Biblioteca Italiana o sia Giornale di letteratura, scienze ed arti Castelli HF = Castelli’s Huldigung den Frauen DAufmGraz = Der Aufmerksame zu Gratz DGöttS = Denkschriften der Göttinger Societät EF = Erste Flugschriften auf besonderen Blättern Ersch-Gruber = Johann Samuel Ersch und Johann Gottfried Gruber (Hgg.), Allgemeine Encyclopädie der Wissenschaften und Künste FdO = Fundgruben des Orients GB = Google Books HorArch = Hormayr’s Archiv für Geographie, Historie, Staats- und Kriegskunst JAsiatique = Journal Asiatique JLM = Journal des Luxus und der Moden Kaltenbäck ZS = Kaltenbäck's österreichischer Zeitschrift für Geschichts- und Staatskunde KreWu = Krestan-Wundsam (Dokumentation zur Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften 1847–1972, Bd I: Die Schriften der philosophisch-historischen Klasse, 1. Teil: Autorenverzeichnis, bearb. von Ludmilla Krestan unter Mitwirkung von Klaus Wundsam, Wien 1972) LLZ = Leipziger Literaturzeitung – 1884 – NJAsiatique = Nouveau Journal Asiatique ÖBeob = Österreichischer Beobachter ÖBG = Katalog der österreichischen Bibliotheksgemeinschaften ÖTKal = Österreichisch Taschenkalender Sartori mT = Sartori’s malerisches Taschenbuch Schmidls öBll = Dr. Schmidl's österreichischen Blättern für Literatur, Kunst, Geschichte, Statistik und Naturkunde TransRAsiaticS GBI = Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland TransRSLit = Transactions of the Royal Society of litterature UUStK = Ulman’s und Umbreit’s theologischen Studien und Kritiken. Zeitschrift für das gesammte Gebiet der Theologie VBlätter = Vaterländische Blätter VerhAkTurin = Verhandlungen der Turiner Akademie VerhAMünchen = Verhandlungen der AkdWiss München WLitZg = Wiener Literaturzeitung WrJbLit = Wiener Jahrbücher der Literatur WZsLKM = Wiener Zeitschrift für Literatur, Kunst und Mode ZDMG = Zeitschrift der Deutschen morgenländischen Gesellschaft. – 1885 – Ein Verzeichnis von Publikationen und Manuskripten von Joseph von Hammer(-Purgstall) A: Auflage C: Band, A: Er- Über- A: Bandzahl Heft, schei A: Verlag Sei- Au- Jahr setzer Titel B+C: Titel der Seiten- Nungsort B: Seiten- ten- Quelle Bemerkung tor bzw. Hg. Zeitschrift angaben B: Band, angabe zahl (soweit Heft verfüg- bar) 1. Erste Flug- Kein Glückwunsch zum Namens- schriften auf 1795 H feste des Herrn Bernhard von AlmW besonderen Jenisch. Blättern 2. Erste Flug- An die Freunde der Literatur, eine schriften auf 1796 H Ode zum Namensfest des Herrn von AlmW besonderen Jenisch. Blättern 3. An die Freunde der Literatur. Dem HP ruft auf zum Hrn. Bernhard v. Jenisch im Namen Studium der 1796 H NTM 3. Bd 309-313 NTMo der Kaiserlichen Akademie der mor- morgendländi- genländischen Sprachen gewidmet. schen Literatur 4. Geburtstagsgabe an Kaiser Erin- Erste Flug- FRANZ II.. – nerun- schriften auf Gedruckt und in 1796 H Das Fest des zwölften Februars. gen besonderen gesonderter und Blättern Audienz dem AlmW Kaiser über- reicht, „nicht – 1886 – ausser Wien und in diesem kaum bekannt geworden“ 5. 1796 H Auf den Tod von Sir William Jones NTM 2. Bd 380-382 NTMo 6. Mes- 1796 H Ueber die Frühlingsfeier Messihis NTM 3. Bd 371-383 NTMo sihi 7. Von den letzten Dingen. Ein 1796 H NTM 2. Bd 225-238 NTMo türkisches Gedicht 8. 1796 H Blumen asiatischer Dichtkunst NTM IX 3-28 AlmW 9. 1797 H Asia NTM 3. Bd 305-310 NTMo 10. Erste Flug- Asia, eine Ode zum Namensfeste des schriften auf 1797 H AlmW Herrn von Jenisch. besonderen Blättern 11. Erste Flug- Auf die musikalischen schriften auf 1797 H Gesellschaften bei Herrn Hofrath AlmW besonderen von Kees. Blättern 12. Hymne auf den Friedenshymnen. Frühling und Vorfrieden von 1797 H NTM 2. Bd 289-294 NTMo Friede Leoben am 18. April 1797 13. Orientalische Sagen. Auszüge aus 1797 H NTM 2. Bd 93-108 NTMo dem Adschaibul-Machlukat. 14. [Baki und Misri] Ueber die Würdigung des schönen Meissners 1797 H 293-300 AlmW Geschlechtes (von orientalischen Apollo 1797. Schriftstellern). 15. Auszüge aus Briefen – Auszug aus 1798 H einem Brief HPs vom 4. Oktober NTM 3. Bd 302-304 NTMo 1798 Wien: „Ich habe das Glück – 1887 – gehabt, den großen Orientalisten, den Frater Paulinus [Wesdin …] hier persönlich kennenzulernen […] 16. Auf den Sieg der Britten vor 1798 H NTM 3. Bd 335-337 NTMo Alexandria 17. Aus einer Persischen Blumenlese. 1798 H Die Trennung, frey nach dem NTM 1. Bd 201-205 NTMo Persischen 18. Les Orientalistes francais. Ode 1798 H NTM 1. Bd 317-322 NTMo imitée d'Horace. Ode 12. L.I. 19. Die Steyermark. Eine Ode gewidmet Aus: Hs Ihro Hochgeboren der Frau Reichs- 1799 H Graz Leykam Literarisches Gräfin von Saurau gebornen Reichs- Werk Gräfin von Schlick 20. Erste Flug- schriften auf 1799 H Die Steyermark; eine Ode Graz AlmW besonderen Blättern 21. Gewidmet Mrs. Die Befreyung von Akri. Ein histori- Spencer Smith sches Gedicht in achtzeiligen 1799 H Degen 30 geborene Freiin Strophen, mit Noten aus Herbert- vollgültigen Quellen Rathkeal 22. Ueber Musik, Botanik und 1799 H NTM 1. Bd 48-60 NTMo Gartenanlagen in Wien. 23. Zeichnungen auf einer Reise von 1. Aufl. 1800 Wien über Triest nach Venedig und X, anonym; 2. Aufl. 1800 H Berlin D. Sander von da zurück nach Tyrol und 355 1822 unter HPs Salzburg im Jahr 1798.
Recommended publications
  • The Uncrowned Lion: Rank, Status, and Identity of The
    Robert Kurelić THE UNCROWNED LION: RANK, STATUS, AND IDENTITY OF THE LAST CILLI MA Thesis in Medieval Studies Central European University Budapest May 2005 THE UNCROWNED LION: RANK, STATUS, AND IDENTITY OF THE LAST CILLI by Robert Kurelić (Croatia) Thesis submitted to the Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University, Budapest, in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the Master of Arts degree in Medieval Studies Accepted in conformance with the standards of the CEU ____________________________________________ Chair, Examination Committee ____________________________________________ Thesis Supervisor ____________________________________________ Examiner Budapest May 2005 THE UNCROWNED LION: RANK, STATUS, AND IDENTITY OF THE LAST CILLI by Robert Kurelić (Croatia) Thesis submitted to the Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University, Budapest, in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the Master of Arts degree in Medieval Studies Accepted in conformance with the standards of the CEU ____________________________________________ External Examiner Budapest May 2005 I, the undersigned, Robert Kurelić, candidate for the MA degree in Medieval Studies declare herewith that the present thesis is exclusively my own work, based on my research and only such external information as properly credited in notes and bibliography. I declare that no unidentified and illegitimate use was made of the work of others, and no part of the thesis infringes on any person’s or institution’s copyright. I also declare that no part of the thesis has been submitted in this form to any other institution of higher education for an academic degree. Budapest, 27 May 2005 __________________________ Signature TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION ____________________________________________________1 ...heind graffen von Cilli und nyemermer... _______________________________ 1 ...dieser Hunadt Janusch aus dem landt Walachey pürtig und eines geringen rittermessigen geschlechts was..
    [Show full text]
  • The American University in Cairo Press
    TheThe AmericanAmerican 2009 UniversityUniversity inin Cairo Cairo PressPress Complete Catalog Fall The American University in Cairo Press, recognized “The American University in Cairo Press is the Arab as the leading English-language publisher in the region, world’s top foreign-language publishing house. It has currently offers a backlist of more than 1000 publica- transformed itself into one of the leading players in tions and publishes annually up to 100 wide-ranging the dialog between East and West, and has produced academic texts and general interest books on ancient a canon of Arabic literature in translation unmatched and modern Egypt and the Middle East, as well as in depth and quality by any publishing house in the Arabic literature in translation, most notably the works world.” of Egypt’s Nobel laureate Naguib Mahfouz. —Egypt Today New Publications 9 Marfleet/El Mahdi Egypt: Moment of Change 22 Abdel-Hakim/Manley Traveling through the 10 Masud et al. Islam and Modernity Deserts of Egypt 14 McNamara The Hashemites 28 Abu Golayyel A Dog with No Tail 23 Mehdawy/Hussein The Pharaoh’s Kitchen 31 Alaidy Being Abbas el Abd 15 Moginet Writing Arabic 2 Arnold The Monuments of Egypt 30 Mustafa Contemporary Iraqi Fiction 31 Aslan The Heron 8 Naguib Women, Water, and Memory 29 Bader Papa Sartre 20 O’Kane The Illustrated Guide to the Museum 9 Bayat Life as Politics of Islamic Art 13 al-Berry Life is More Beautiful than Paradise 2 Ratnagar The Timeline History of Ancient Egypt 15 Bloom/Blair Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art 33 Roberts, R.A.
    [Show full text]
  • The American University in Cairo Press Centennial Catalog
    The American University in Cairo Press Centennial Catalog New Books 2019 Cover: See The American University in Cairo: 100 Years, 100 Stories, pages 4 and 5 Letter from the Director It gives me great pleasure to join in marking the hundredth anniversary of the founding of our parent institution, the American University in Cairo, with the publication of this celebratory catalog of AUC Press books. Spanning two publication seasons, it features all titles published or forthcoming in 2019 and early 2020, not least The American Uni- versity in Cairo: 100 Years, 100 Stories by Andrew Humphreys (page 4). This engaging and attractive volume is a fitting tribute to AUC’s legacy and a valuable documentation of the people, history, and events that have helped shape the university. Suitably, this catalog also presents James Steele’s survey of the works and architectural philosophy of the principal architect of the Community Design Collaborative, the firm which led the design and construction of AUC’s New Cairo campus, Abdelhalim Ibrahim Abdel- halim: An Architecture of Collective Memory (page 3). Meanwhile Aidan Dodson builds on the success of Sethy I: King of Egypt, His Life and Afterlife (page 16) to bring us the next title in the AUC Press book series on key figures in ancient Egyptian history,Rameses III, King of Egypt, His Life and Afterlife (page 17). This year’s offerings of ancient Egypt titles also include Reg Clark’s Securing Eternity: Ancient Egyptian Tomb Security from Prehistory to the Pyramids (page 19), a study of the evolution of this aspect of tomb architecture over more than two millennia; and a wide-ranging collected volume on non- royal elite autobiographical texts and inscriptions, Living Forever: Self-Presentation in Ancient Egypt (page 19), edited by Hussein Bassir.
    [Show full text]
  • Notes of Michael J. Zeps, SJ
    Marquette University e-Publications@Marquette History Faculty Research and Publications History Department 1-1-2011 Documents of Baudirektion Wien 1919-1941: Notes of Michael J. Zeps, S.J. Michael J. Zeps S.J. Marquette University, [email protected] Preface While doing research in Vienna for my dissertation on relations between Church and State in Austria between the wars I became intrigued by the outward appearance of the public housing projects put up by Red Vienna at the same time. They seemed to have a martial cast to them not at all restricted to the famous Karl-Marx-Hof so, against advice that I would find nothing, I decided to see what could be found in the archives of the Stadtbauamt to tie the architecture of the program to the civil war of 1934 when the structures became the principal focus of conflict. I found no direct tie anywhere in the documents but uncovered some circumstantial evidence that might be explored in the future. One reason for publishing these notes is to save researchers from the same dead end I ran into. This is not to say no evidence was ever present because there are many missing documents in the sequence which might turn up in the future—there is more than one complaint to be found about staff members taking documents and not returning them—and the socialists who controlled the records had an interest in denying any connection both before and after the civil war. Certain kinds of records are simply not there including assessments of personnel which are in the files of the Magistratsdirektion not accessible to the public and minutes of most meetings within the various Magistrats Abteilungen connected with the program.
    [Show full text]
  • IN FO R M a TIO N to U SERS This Manuscript Has Been Reproduced from the Microfilm Master. UMI Films the Text Directly From
    INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleed through, substandard margin*, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy. Higher quality 6" x 9" black and white photographic prints are available for any photographs or illustrations appearing in this copy for an additional charge. Contact UMI directly to order. A Ben A Howeii Information Company 300 North Zeeb Road Ann Arbor. Ml 48106-1346 USA 313.761-4700 800.521-0600 RENDERING TO CAESAR: SECULAR OBEDIENCE AND CONFESSIONAL LOYALTY IN MORITZ OF SAXONY'S DIPLOMACY ON THE EVE OF THE SCMALKALDIC WAR DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By James E.
    [Show full text]
  • Clothing, Memory and Identity in 16Th Century Swedish Funerary Practice
    Joseph M. Gonzalez 6 Fashioning Death: Clothing, Memory and Identity in 16th Century Swedish Funerary Practice Introduction King Gustav Vasa was married three times. In 1531, less than a decade after his election as King of Sweden, he made a match calculated to boost his prestige and help consolidate his position as king and married Katarina von Sax-Lauenburg, the daughter of Duke Magnus and a relative of the emperor. She bore the king one son, Erik, and died suddenly in 1535 (Svalenius, 1992). After her death, the king married the daughter of one of the most powerful noble houses in Sweden, Margareta Eriksdotter Leijonhufvud in 1536. Queen Margareta bore the king eight children before she died in 1551. By August of 1552, the fifty-six year old Gustav Vasa had found a new queen, the 16-year-old Katarina Gustavsdotter Stenbock, daughter of another of Sweden’s leading noble houses. Despite the youth of his bride, the marriage bore no children and the old king died eight years later (Svalenius, 1992). The king’s death occasioned a funeral of unprecedented magnificence that was unique both in its scale and in its promotion of the Vasa dynasty’s image and interests. Unique to Vasa’s funeral was the literal incorporation of the bodies of his two deceased wives in the ceremony. They shared his bed-like hearse on the long road to Uppsala and the single copper casket that was interred in the cathedral crypt. Six months after the funeral, Gustav Vasa’s son with Katarina von Sax-Lauenburg, Erik, was crowned king.
    [Show full text]
  • GERMAN LITERARY FAIRY TALES, 1795-1848 by CLAUDIA MAREIKE
    ROMANTICISM, ORIENTALISM, AND NATIONAL IDENTITY: GERMAN LITERARY FAIRY TALES, 1795-1848 By CLAUDIA MAREIKE KATRIN SCHWABE A DISSERTATION PRESENTED TO THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA 2012 1 © 2012 Claudia Mareike Katrin Schwabe 2 To my beloved parents Dr. Roman and Cornelia Schwabe 3 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS First and foremost, I would like to thank my supervisory committee chair, Dr. Barbara Mennel, who supported this project with great encouragement, enthusiasm, guidance, solidarity, and outstanding academic scholarship. I am particularly grateful for her dedication and tireless efforts in editing my chapters during the various phases of this dissertation. I could not have asked for a better, more genuine mentor. I also want to express my gratitude to the other committee members, Dr. Will Hasty, Dr. Franz Futterknecht, and Dr. John Cech, for their thoughtful comments and suggestions, invaluable feedback, and for offering me new perspectives. Furthermore, I would like to acknowledge the abundant support and inspiration of my friends and colleagues Anna Rutz, Tim Fangmeyer, and Dr. Keith Bullivant. My heartfelt gratitude goes to my family, particularly my parents, Dr. Roman and Cornelia Schwabe, as well as to my brother Marius and his wife Marina Schwabe. Many thanks also to my dear friends for all their love and their emotional support throughout the years: Silke Noll, Alice Mantey, Lea Hüllen, and Tina Dolge. In addition, Paul and Deborah Watford deserve special mentioning who so graciously and welcomingly invited me into their home and family. Final thanks go to Stephen Geist and his parents who believed in me from the very start.
    [Show full text]
  • Redacted Thesis (PDF, 12Mb)
    Victorian Egyptology and the Making of a Colonial Field Science, 1850 – 1906 by Meira Gold Wolfson College Department of History and Philosophy of Science This thesis is submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Date of Submission: December 2019 Declaration This thesis is the result of my own work and includes nothing which is the outcome of work done in collaboration except as declared in the Preface and specified in the text. It is not substantially the same as any that I have submitted, or, is being concurrently submitted for a degree or diploma or other qualification at the University of Cambridge or any other University or similar institution except as declared in the Preface and specified in the text. I further state that no substantial part of my thesis has already been submitted, or, is being concurrently submitted for any such degree, diploma or other qualification at the University of Cambridge or any other University or similar institution except as declared in the Preface and specified in the text. It does not exceed the prescribed word limit for the History and Philosophy of Science Degree Committee. Abstract Victorian Egyptology and the Making of a Colonial Field Science, 1850-1906 Meira Gold This dissertation provides a new account of the origins of archaeological fieldwork in the Nile Delta. It considers how practitioners from diverse disciplinary backgrounds circulated knowledge about the built environment of pharaonic ruins: monuments, architecture, burials, and soil mounds that remained in situ. I trace the development of Egyptology from an activity that could be practiced long-distance through a network of informants to one that required first-hand field experience.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ginger Fox's Two Crowns Central Administration and Government in Sigismund of Luxembourg's Realms
    Doctoral Dissertation THE GINGER FOX’S TWO CROWNS CENTRAL ADMINISTRATION AND GOVERNMENT IN SIGISMUND OF LUXEMBOURG’S REALMS 1410–1419 By Márta Kondor Supervisor: Katalin Szende Submitted to the Medieval Studies Department, Central European University, Budapest in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Medieval Studies, CEU eTD Collection Budapest 2017 Table of Contents I. INTRODUCTION 6 I.1. Sigismund and His First Crowns in a Historical Perspective 6 I.1.1. Historiography and Present State of Research 6 I.1.2. Research Questions and Methodology 13 I.2. The Luxembourg Lion and its Share in Late-Medieval Europe (A Historical Introduction) 16 I.2.1. The Luxembourg Dynasty and East-Central-Europe 16 I.2.2. Sigismund’s Election as King of the Romans in 1410/1411 21 II. THE PERSONAL UNION IN CHARTERS 28 II.1. One King – One Land: Chancery Practice in the Kingdom of Hungary 28 II.2. Wearing Two Crowns: the First Years (1411–1414) 33 II.2.1. New Phenomena in the Hungarian Chancery Practice after 1411 33 II.2.1.1. Rex Romanorum: New Title, New Seal 33 II.2.1.2. Imperial Issues – Non-Imperial Chanceries 42 II.2.2. Beginnings of Sigismund’s Imperial Chancery 46 III. THE ADMINISTRATION: MOBILE AND RESIDENT 59 III.1. The Actors 62 III.1.1. At the Travelling King’s Court 62 III.1.1.1. High Dignitaries at the Travelling Court 63 III.1.1.1.1. Hungarian Notables 63 III.1.1.1.2. Imperial Court Dignitaries and the Imperial Elite 68 III.1.1.2.
    [Show full text]
  • Till Eulenspiegel As a “Recurring Character” in the Works of Hans Sachs
    Narrative Arrangement in 16th-Century Till Eulenspiegel Texts: The Reinvention of Familiar Structures A Dissertation SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY Isaac Smith Schendel IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Advisor: Dr. Anatoly Liberman June 2018 © Isaac Smith Schendel 2018 i Acknowledgements First and foremost, I would like to thank my doctoral advisor, Dr. Anatoly Liberman, for his kind direction, ideas, and guidance through the entire process of graduate school, from the first lectures on Middle High German grammar and Scandinavian Literature, to the preliminary exams, prospectus and multiple thesis drafts. Without his watchful eye, advice, and inexhaustible patience, this dissertation would have never seen the light of day. Drs. James A. Parente, Andrew Scheil, and Ray Wakefield also deserve thanks for their willingness to serve on the committee. Special gratitude goes to Dr. Parente for reading suggestions and leadership during the latter part of my graduate school career. His practical approach, willingness to meet with me on multiple occasions, and ability to explain the intricacies of the university system are deeply appreciated. I have also been helped by a number of scholars outside of Minnesota. The material discussed in the second chapter of the dissertation is a reformulated, expanded, and improved version of my article appearing in Daphnis 43.2. Although the central thesis is now radically different, I would still like to thank Drs. Ulrich Seelbach and Alexander Schwarz for their editorial work during that time, especially as they directed my attention to additional information and material within the S1515 chapbook.
    [Show full text]
  • Camera Obscura Vs
    MAX-PLANCK-INSTITUT FÜR WISSENSCHAFTSGESCHICHTE Max Planck Institute for the History of Science 2006 PREPRINT 307 Erna Fiorentini Camera Obscura vs. Camera Lucida – Distinguishing Early Nineteenth Century Modes of Seeing TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Distinguishing Technologies: a Box and a Prism 5 2. Untangling Stories: an Old and a New Device 6 3. Parting Fortunes: the New Eclipses the Old 10 4. Diverging Necessities: Old and New Demands 12 5. Discerning Visual Modalities: Projective vs. Prismatic Seeing 20 5.1. Accuracy and Perceptual Experience: Criteria in Comparison 21 5.1.1. Degrees of ‘Truth to Nature’ 21 5.1.2. Degrees of Perceptual Experience 27 5.2. Projective vs. Prismatic: Optical Principles in Comparison 29 6. An Epilogue: the ‘Prismatic’ as the Camera-Lucida-Mode of Seeing 37 CAMERA OBSCURA VS. CAMERA LUCIDA 1 DISTINGUISHING EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURY MODES OF SEEING Erna Fiorentini If we look at Fig. 1, we see a painter holding an inspired pose while beholding and recording the landscape. Although he appears to beindulging in purely aesthetic rapture, he is equipped with optical drawing devices and with many other instruments for observation, tracing and measuring. A Camera Lucida is arrayed on a tripod on the right, surrounded by a telescope, a setsquare, a ruler, a pair of compasses and other devices, while in the background a tent-type Camera Obscura is in use. This motif belonged to Carl Jacob Lindström’s well-known satiric, illustrated book I Stranieri in Italia, printed and distributed in Naples in 1830.2 Moreover, Lindström produced countless further exemplars of this scene in watercolour, engraving and lithography.
    [Show full text]
  • INFORMATION to USERS This Manuscript Has Been Reproduced
    INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI film s the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough* substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely afreet reproductioiL In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these wül be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy. Higher quality 6" x 9" black and white photographic prints are available for any photographs or illustrations appearing in this copy for an additional charge. Contact UMI directly to order. UMI University Microfilms International A Bell & Howell Information Company 300 North Zeeb Road. Ann Arbor. Ml 48106-1346 USA 313/761-4700 800/521-0600 Order Nnsaber 9816176 ‘‘Ordo et lîbertas”: Church discipline and the makers of church order in sixteenth century North Germany Jaynes, JefiErey Philip, Ph.D.
    [Show full text]