Gustav Mensching Explained

Gustav Mensching
Birth Date:5 June 1901
Birth Place:Hanover, Germany
Death Place:Düren, Germany
Nationality:German
Doctoral Advisor:Rudolf Otto

Gustav Mensching (6 May 1901 – 30 September 1978) was a German theologian who was Professor of Comparative Religious Studies at the University of Bonn from 1936 to 1972.

Biography

Gustav Mensching was born in Hanover, Germany on 6 May 1901, the son of farmer and businessman Gustav Mensching (1869-1906) and Anna Vogler. Mensching studied philosophy, Protestant theology and religious studies at the universities of Göttingen, Marburg and Berlin. He gained his Dr. Theol. at Maburg under the supervision of Rudolf Otto.

Mensching completed his habilitation in religious history at the University of Braunschweig in 1927. The same year he married Erika Dombrowski, with whom he had two sons, the Germanist and philosopher . From 1927 to 1936, Mensching was Associate Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Riga. In 1936 he was appointed Professor of Comparative Religious Studies at the University of Bonn. Due to his membership in the National Socialist German Lecturers League, Mensching was from 1946 to 1948 prohibited from teaching. has since demonstrated was Mensching was not a supporter of Nazism. Mensching published a number of works on religion. Among his best known students were, and .

Mensching retired from the University of Bonn in 1972. He died in Düren, Germany on 30 September 1978.

See also

Selected works

Sources

Gustav Mensching (1901–1978). In: Benedikt Kranemann/Klaus Raschzok (Hrsg.): Gottesdienst als Feld theologischer Wissenschaft im 20. Jahrhundert, Münster 2001, Bd. 2, S. 722–731