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See also: German historian, was See also: born at See also: Jever in See also: East See also: Friesland on the 17th of See also: November 1776
.
He took up the study of See also: theology, mainly at See also: Gottingen, and began See also: life as a private tutor
.
Turning to the study of See also: history, he carried with him the tendency to construct his syntheses upon the scanty basis of 18th-century generalizations; yet in spite of the growing scientific school he became and remained for a quarter of a century the most popular German historian
.
In 1807, inspired by his study of See also: Dante, he published his first See also: work Abdlard and Dulcin, a defence of See also: scholasticism and See also: medieval thought
.
Two years later See also: biographical studies of See also: Theodore Beza and See also: Peter See also: Martyr Vermili (Leben See also: des Theodor de Beza and des Peter Martyr Vermili, See also: Heidelberg, 1809) revealed more genuine scholarship
.
In 1812 appeared his History of the Iconoclastic Emperors of the East (Geschichte der bilderstiurmenden Kaiser des ostromischen Reichs), in which he controverted some points in See also: Gibbon and sought to avoid See also: painting the past in See also: present-See also: day See also: colours
.
His own strong predispositions prevented him from accomplishing this, however, and the history remains open to See also: grave scientific See also: criticism
.
But it won for him the favour of Archbishop Karl Theodor See also: Dalberg, and secured for him a professorship in the See also: Frankfort See also: Lyceum
.
He See also: left Frankfort in 1819 to become professor of history at Heidelberg, where he resided until his See also: death on the 23rd of See also: September 1861
.
In 1815 appeared the first See also: volume of his See also: World History (Weltgeschichte in zusammenhdngender Erzahlung)
.
This work, though never completed, was extended through many volumes, bespeaking an inexhaustible energy and a vast erudition
.
But it lacks both accuracy of fact and charm of See also: style, and is to-day deservedly quite forgotten
.
On the other See also: hand a See also: translation of the pedagogical handbook of Vincent of See also: Beauvais and the accompanying monograph are still of value
.
The next note-worthy work was a history of antiquity and its culture (Universalhistorische Ubersicht der Geschichte der See also: alien Welt and ihrer Kultur, 1st See also: part, 1826; 2nd part, 1834), which, while revealing little knowledge of the new criticism of See also: sources inaugurated by F
.
A
.
See also: Wolf and B
.
G
.
Niebuhr, won its way by its unique handling of the subject and its See also: grand style
.
In 1823 he published in two volumes a Geschichte des 18ten Jahrhunderts; then, enlarged and improved, this work appeared in six volumes as Geschichte des i8ten Jahrhunderts and des' 9ten bis zum Sturz des franzosischen Kaiserreichs (1836—1848)
.
The history had a most extraordinary success, especially among the See also: common See also: people, owing, not to its scientific qualities, but to the fact that the author boldly and sternly sat in See also: judgment upon men and events, and in his judgments voiced the feelings of the German nation in his day
.
For this very reason it is no longer read
.
It has been translated into See also: English by D
.
See also: Davison (8 vols., 1843—1852)
.
Finally, Schlosser undertook a popular World History for the German People (Weltgeschichte far das deutsche Voile, 1844—1857), which also enjoyed the favour of those for whom it was written
.
Schlosser stands apart from the See also: movement towards scientific history in See also: Germany in the 19th century
.
Refusing to limit himself to See also: political history, as did See also: Ranke, he never learned to handle his See also: literary sources with the care of the scientific historian
.
History was to him, as it had been to See also: Cicero, a school for morals; but lie had perhaps a juster conception than Ranke of the breadth and scope of the historian's See also: field
.
See G
.
G
.
Gervinus (Schlosser's pupil), F
.
C
.
Schlosser, ein Nekrolog (1861) ; G
.
Weber, F
.
C
.
Schlosser, der Historiker, Erinnerungsblatler (
See also: Leipzig, 1876) ; and O
.
Lorenz, F
.
C . Schlosser ( Vienna, 1878) . |
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