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Born near Aachen, Leonhard Schmitz (1807-90) studied at the
University of Bonn, from which he received his PhD, before marrying
an Englishwoman and becoming a naturalised British citizen. Made
famous by the 1844 publication of his translation of Niebuhr's
Lectures on the History of Rome, he became rector of the Royal High
School, Edinburgh, where he taught Alexander Graham Bell. He also
briefly tutored the future Edward VII (and he had previously taught
Prince Albert in Bonn). This short-lived quarterly journal, which
Schmitz founded and edited between 1844 and 1850, focused
exclusively on aspects of classical antiquity - in contrast to the
more general literary reviews that were common in the period. It
illuminates the development of Classics as a specialist discipline
as well as contemporary intellectual links between Britain and
Germany. This first volume was published in 1844.
Born near Aachen, Leonhard Schmitz (1807-90) studied at the
University of Bonn, from which he received his PhD, before marrying
an Englishwoman and becoming a naturalised British citizen. Made
famous by the 1844 publication of his translation of Niebuhr's
Lectures on the History of Rome, he became rector of the Royal High
School, Edinburgh, where he taught Alexander Graham Bell. He also
briefly tutored the future Edward VII (and he had previously taught
Prince Albert in Bonn). This short-lived quarterly journal, which
Schmitz founded and edited between 1844 and 1850, focused
exclusively on aspects of classical antiquity - in contrast to the
more general literary reviews that were common in the period. It
illuminates the development of Classics as a specialist discipline
as well as contemporary intellectual links between Britain and
Germany. This second volume was published in 1845.
Born near Aachen, Leonhard Schmitz (1807-90) studied at the
University of Bonn, from which he received his PhD, before marrying
an Englishwoman and becoming a naturalised British citizen. Made
famous by the 1844 publication of his translation of Niebuhr's
Lectures on the History of Rome, he became rector of the Royal High
School, Edinburgh, where he taught Alexander Graham Bell. He also
briefly tutored the future Edward VII (and he had previously taught
Prince Albert in Bonn). This short-lived quarterly journal, which
Schmitz founded and edited between 1844 and 1850, focused
exclusively on aspects of classical antiquity - in contrast to the
more general literary reviews that were common in the period. It
illuminates the development of Classics as a specialist discipline
as well as contemporary intellectual links between Britain and
Germany. This third volume was published in 1846.
Born near Aachen, Leonhard Schmitz (1807-90) studied at the
University of Bonn, from which he received his PhD, before marrying
an Englishwoman and becoming a naturalised British citizen. Made
famous by the 1844 publication of his translation of Niebuhr's
Lectures on the History of Rome, he became rector of the Royal High
School, Edinburgh, where he taught Alexander Graham Bell. He also
briefly tutored the future Edward VII (and he had previously taught
Prince Albert in Bonn). This short-lived quarterly journal, which
Schmitz founded and edited between 1844 and 1850, focused
exclusively on aspects of classical antiquity - in contrast to the
more general literary reviews that were common in the period. It
illuminates the development of Classics as a specialist discipline
as well as contemporary intellectual links between Britain and
Germany. This fourth volume was published in 1847.
Born near Aachen, Leonhard Schmitz (1807-90) studied at the
University of Bonn, from which he received his PhD, before marrying
an Englishwoman and becoming a naturalised British citizen. Made
famous by the 1844 publication of his translation of Niebuhr's
Lectures on the History of Rome, he became rector of the Royal High
School, Edinburgh, where he taught Alexander Graham Bell. He also
briefly tutored the future Edward VII (and he had previously taught
Prince Albert in Bonn). This short-lived quarterly journal, which
Schmitz founded and edited between 1844 and 1850, focused
exclusively on aspects of classical antiquity - in contrast to the
more general literary reviews that were common in the period. It
illuminates the development of Classics as a specialist discipline
as well as contemporary intellectual links between Britain and
Germany. This fifth volume was published in 1848.
Born near Aachen, Leonhard Schmitz (1807-90) studied at the
University of Bonn, from which he received his PhD, before marrying
an Englishwoman and becoming a naturalised British citizen. Made
famous by the 1844 publication of his translation of Niebuhr's
Lectures on the History of Rome, he became rector of the Royal High
School, Edinburgh, where he taught Alexander Graham Bell. He also
briefly tutored the future Edward VII (and he had previously taught
Prince Albert in Bonn). This short-lived quarterly journal, which
Schmitz founded and edited between 1844 and 1850, focused
exclusively on aspects of classical antiquity - in contrast to the
more general literary reviews that were common in the period. It
illuminates the development of Classics as a specialist discipline
as well as contemporary intellectual links between Britain and
Germany. This sixth volume was published in 1849.
Born near Aachen, Leonhard Schmitz (1807-90) studied at the
University of Bonn, from which he received his PhD, before marrying
an Englishwoman and becoming a naturalised British citizen. Made
famous by the 1844 publication of his translation of Niebuhr's
Lectures on the History of Rome, he became rector of the Royal High
School, Edinburgh, where he taught Alexander Graham Bell. He also
briefly tutored the future Edward VII (and he had previously taught
Prince Albert in Bonn). This short-lived quarterly journal, which
Schmitz founded and edited between 1844 and 1850, focused
exclusively on aspects of classical antiquity - in contrast to the
more general literary reviews that were common in the period. It
illuminates the development of Classics as a specialist discipline
as well as contemporary intellectual links between Britain and
Germany. This seventh volume was published in 1850.
This three-volume English translation of Barthold Georg Niebuhr's
influential History of Rome was published between 1828 and 1842. It
follows the second German edition, which the author contrasts with
the earlier edition (1811 1812, translated into English in 1827) as
being 'the work of a man who has reached his maturity'. The early
part of the nineteenth century saw important developments in
philological scholarship in Germany, and Niebuhr's international
career as a statesman and scholar reflected Germany's new-found
confidence in the wider world. His book had a lasting impact both
within its own subject area and on the understanding of history as
an academic discipline, and was a landmark of nineteenth-century
European scholarship. Volume 3 begins with the Licinian rogations
and ends with the first Punic war.
Dieser Buchtitel ist Teil des Digitalisierungsprojekts Springer
Book Archives mit Publikationen, die seit den Anfangen des Verlags
von 1842 erschienen sind. Der Verlag stellt mit diesem Archiv
Quellen fur die historische wie auch die disziplingeschichtliche
Forschung zur Verfugung, die jeweils im historischen Kontext
betrachtet werden mussen. Dieser Titel erschien in der Zeit vor
1945 und wird daher in seiner zeittypischen politisch-ideologischen
Ausrichtung vom Verlag nicht beworben.
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