Ludwig Traube (palaeographer)
Appearance
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (March 2011) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Ludwig Traube (June 19, 1861 – May 19, 1907) was a paleographer and held the first chair of Medieval Latin in Germany (at the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich). He was a son of the physician Ludwig Traube (1818-1876).
Traube was born in Berlin, the son of a middle-class Jewish family, and studied at the universities of Munich and Greifswald. In 1883 he finished his Ph.D. with a dissertation entitled Varia libamenta critica. He finished his Habilitation in classical and medieval philology in 1888 with a part of his book on Carolingian poetry. He became a professor in Munich in 1904 and in 1905 discovered he had leukemia, from which he died two years later.
Categories:
- 1861 births
- 1907 deaths
- 19th-century German people
- 19th-century philologists
- German philologists
- Palaeographers
- Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich faculty
- University of Greifswald alumni
- Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich alumni
- German Jews
- People from the Province of Brandenburg
- Writers from Berlin
- Deaths from leukemia
- German male writers
- 19th-century German writers
- German linguist stubs