Alwin Schultz Explained

Alwin Schultz (6 August 1838 – 10 March 1909) was a German art historian and medievalist, professor of art history at the Charles University in Prague.

Biography

He was born at Muskau, Lusatia. He studied archaeology and Germanic philology at the University of Breslau (1858/59 and 1862–64), and in 1859–61 attended the Bauakademie in Berlin, where he also took drawing classes. In 1866 he became a docent for Christian archaeology and art history at Breslau, where in 1872 he was named an associate professor. In 1882 he was called to the University of Prague as a full professor.[1] [2]

Among his publications are a treatise on the Minnesingers in two volumes (1889) and a discussion of Germany in the 14th and 15th centuries (1892) as well as a treatise on domestic life in Europe during the Middle Ages and the Early Modern period (1903).

Bibliography

He was the author of biographies on Karl Daniel Friedrich Bach and Johann Gustav Gottlieb Büsching in the Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie.[3]

References

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=vt0P6_HDwpIC&dq=%22Schultz%2C+Alwin%22+1838++Muskau&pg=PA274 Schlumberger - Thiersch / edited by Rudolf Vierhaus
  2. http://www.biographien.ac.at/oebl/oebl_S/Schultz_Alwin_1838_1909.xml Schultz, Alwin (1838-1909), Kunsthistoriker und Kulturhistoriker
  3. https://de.wikisource.org/wiki/Kategorie:ADB:Autor:Alwin_Schultz Kategorie:ADB:Autor:Alwin Schultz