Edmund Buchner Explained

Edmund Buchner (22 October 1923, Ittling near Straubing – 27 August 2011)[1] was a German ancient historian and former President of the German Archaeological Institute (Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, or DAI).

He graduated in 1953 from the University of Erlangen, with a thesis on the Panegyrikos of Isocrates and then became assistant to the newly appointed to Erlangen Helmut Berve.[2] As Berve was Director of the Commission for Ancient History and Epigraphy (Kommission für Alte Geschichte und Epigraphik, or AEK) in Munich from 1960, Buchner followed him as a research assistant From 1969 until 1979, Buchner was a professor and director of the AEK, which belonged to what is now the DAI, and from 1980 to 1988 the DAI's president.

Buchner is known primarily for his research on the solarium Augusti, the sundial erected by the Roman emperor Augustus on the Field of Mars in Rome.[3] [4]

Works

Notes and References

  1. http://anzeigen-suchen.sueddeutsche.de/gelanz/servlet/anzdescription.BinaryAnsicht?anzId=226306 Traueranzeige
  2. Lesky, Albin (trans. James Willis, Cornelis de Heer) (1996). A history of Greek literature, p. 585. Hackett Publishing,
  3. Michael Schütz (Zur Sonnenuhr des Augustus auf dem Marsfeld. In: Gymnasium 97, 1990, S. 432–457) widerlegt wesentliche Aspekte von Buchners Rekonstruktion. Fehldeutungen antiker Quellen durch Buchner wies Peter Heslin (Augustus, Domitian and the So-called Horologium Augusti. In: The Journal of Roman Studies 97, 2007, S. 1–20) nach.
  4. Hudson-Williams H. Ll. (1960). The Panegyricus of Isocrates (review) The Classical Review (New Series) (1960), 10: 31–33.