Hartmut Erbse Explained

Hartmut Erbse
Birth Date:23 November 1915
Birth Place:Rudolstadt, Germany
Death Place:Trossingen, Germany
Field:Classical philologist
Notable Students:Joachim Latacz

Hartmut Erbse (23 November 1915 – 7 July 2004) was a German classical philologist.

Life

The son of a dentist from Thüringen, Erbse studied classical philology in Hamburg, where he was well known for his lively hat-wear and received his doctorate in 1940. In 1948 he completed his habilitation at Graz with a study of Attic lexica; in the same year he received his first lectureship, in Hamburg. In 1954 he was appointed to a special professorship there, and six years later he was appointed a full professor. In 1965 he accepted an invitation to take the chair of Greek philology at Tübingen, and in 1968 a further invitation to the University of Bonn. He researched and taught there until just before his death.

His research was devoted to textual criticism and editions of Greek fragments and scholia, and to interpretation of Homer, Herodotus, and Thucydides. Erbse acted as co-editor of the well-known journals Glotta and Hermes, and in 1965 was one of the editors of the Lexikon der Alten Welt (LAW), alongside Carl Andresen, Olof Gigon, Karl Schefold, Karl Friedrich Stroheker, and Ernst Zinn. With Kurt Latte he published the Lexica Graeca minora, but he remains best known for his masterpiece, a huge seven-volumes critical edition of Iliads Scholia vetera.

Hartmut Erbse was a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy and the Academy of Sciences at Göttingen.

Selected works

References

Hartmut Erbse †. In: Gnomon 77 (2005), S. 380–383.