Anton Wilhelm Ertl
Appearance
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (December 2013) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Anton Wilhelm Ertl (10 September 1654, Munich – c.1715) was a German lawyer and geographer.
He studied law at Ingolstadt, and from around 1680, worked as a lawyer in the Munich court. He also served as a judge in the jurisdictions of various monasteries in Bavaria (from 1682). In 1705 he received the title of imperial counsellor and was a lawyer of the imperial equestrian order in Suebia.[1]
He was the author of:
- Austriana Regina Arabiae (1688): A novel Ertl dedicated to Prince Joseph I (1678–1711).[2]
- Chur-bayerischer Atlas (1687): An atlas with descriptions of Bavarian places of interest of which a short story accompanies engravings of the pertinent locations (engravings by Johann Ulrich Kraus).
- Relationes Curiosae Bavaricae (1685): A collection of anecdotes and character portrayals derived from Bavarian history.[3][1]
References
[edit]- Leitschuh, Max: Die Matrikeln der Oberklassen des Wilhelmsgymnasiums in München, 4 Bde., München 1970-1976; Bd. 1, S. 197
- ^ a b Acta Conventus Neo-Latini Upsaliensis: Proceedings of the Fourteenth edited by Astrid Steiner-Weber
- ^ Google Books Austriana Regina Arabiae
- ^ Google Books Relationes Curiosae Bavaricae
External links
[edit]- WorldCat Identities Most widely held works by Anton Wilhelm Ertl
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anton Wilhelm Ertl.