Jump to content

Karl Schenkl

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Citation bot (talk | contribs) at 08:07, 18 December 2019 (Alter: url. Add: doi, title, pages. Removed parameters. | You can use this bot yourself. Report bugs here.| Activated by User:Grimes2 | via #UCB_webform). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Karl Schenkl (Brno, 11 December 1827 – Graz, 20 September 1900) was an Austrian classical philologist.

Biography

Schenkl studied classical philology and law from 1845 to 1849 at the University of Vienna. After 1850 he taught at various gymnasiums, and in 1858 was appointed professor of classical philology at the University of Innsbruck, where he founded the Philological Institute in 1860. In 1863 he left for the University of Graz, and in the same year started a philological seminar and became a corresponding member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences; in 1868 he became a full member. Schenkl was rector at Graz from 1869 to 1870, and in 1870 became a member of the Gymnasialreformkommission (commission for the reform of the gymnasiums). In 1875, he was appointed professor at the University of Vienna.

Schenkl was co-founder in 1885 and president of the "Eranos Vindobonensis", a historical society associated with the University of Vienna's Institute for Classical Philology, Middle and Late Latin. With Wilhelm von Hartel he founded, in 1879, the journal Wiener Studien, and he was publisher of the series Bibliotheca Teubneriana. Schenkl edited Latin texts by the Church Fathers and others for the Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum (CSEL),[1] and published a number of important textbooks; his Griechisches Elementarbuch (1852) was used in Austrian schools for 70 years, and his students' dictionary of Ancient Greek was still in use in 2009.[2] His interests also extended to Sanskrit, his lectures on which paved the way for the later foundation of the chair of comparative linguistics at Graz,[3] and fairytales; his 1864 article "Das Märchen von Schneewittchen und Shakespeare's Cymbeline" is one of the earliest studies of "Snow White".[4]

In 1919 a plaque honoring Schenkl was unveiled in the arcaded courtyard of the University of Vienna.[5] He was the father of philologist Heinrich Schenkl.

Selected works

For the CSEL

  • Ambrose, Hexameron, De paradiso, De Cain, De Noe, De Abraham, De Isaac, De bono mortis. 1896, Vol. 32/1
  • Ambrose, De Iacob, De Ioseph, De patriarchis, De fuga saeculi, De interpellatione Iob et David, De apologia prophetae David, De Helia, De Nabuthae, De Tobia. 1897, Vol. 32/2
  • Ambrose, Expositio evangelii secundum Lucam. 1902, Vol. 32/4
  • Sancti Paulini epigramma, Versus ad gratiam domini, De verbi incarnatione, De ecclesia. 1888, Vol. 16/1
  • Claudius Marius Victor, Alethia. 1888, Vol. 16/1
  • Faltonia Betitia Proba, Cento. 1888, Vol. 16/1

References

  1. ^ "A complete list of CSEL volumes arranged according to authors". Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  2. ^ Acham, Karl, ed. (2009). Kunst und Geisteswissenschaften aus Graz: Werk und Wirken überregional bedeutsamer Künstler und Gelehrter: vom 15. Jahrhundert bis zur Jahrtausendwende. Kunst und Wissenschaft aus Graz (in German). Vol. 2. Vienna: Böhlau. p. 471. ISBN 9783205777069.
  3. ^ Achim, p. 76.
  4. ^ Jones, Steven (January–March 1979). "The Pitfalls of Snow White Scholarship". The Journal of American Folklore. 92 (363): 69–73. doi:10.2307/538846. JSTOR 538846. {{cite journal}}: |contribution= ignored (help)
  5. ^ Maisel, Thomas; Nielsen, Camilla R. (trans.) (2008). Scholars in Stone and Bronze: The Monuments in the Arcaded Courtyard of the University of Vienna. Vienna: Böhlau. p. 68. ISBN 9783205782247.

Sources