Lorenz von Westenrieder explained

Lorenz von Westenrieder
Birth Date:1 August 1748

Lorenz von Westenrieder (1 August 1748 – 15 March 1829) was a well-known author and historian in Bavaria and a critic of the Elector Karl Theordor and supporter of Maximilian IV Joseph. There are several memorials to him in Munich.[1]

Biography and politics

Lorenz von Westenrieder was a prominent Bavarian intellectual. He started his career as a professor at the Gymnasium in Landshut. There he taught both rhetoric and poetry until 1774 when he transferred to Munich. In 1776 he was the secretary for history at the Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Westenrieder was, for a short time, a member of the Illuminati.[2] [3] Later, in 1799, under the rule of Maximilian IV Joseph he worked for the new revised College for Book Censorship that Maximilian von Montgelas had founded. Westenrieder's membership in the Illuminati may have helped his selection by Von Montgelas, a fellow Illuminatus. Westenrieder was one of the voices in the intellectual movement known as the Bavarian Enlightenment. This occurred much later than the Enlightenment that had already reached its zenith in much of Europe, and would occur in a syncopated form, first under Maximilian III Joseph in the middle of the eighteenth century, and later, during the reign of Maximilian IV Joseph 1799-1806, ending in 1817 with Montgelas's dismissal from King Maximilian I (previously Maximilian IV Joseph).

Works

Lorenz von Westenrieder is better known as an author of German literature than a political figure. During his life, he wrote over thirty separate works:

Notes

  1. Karl Theodor von Heigel: "Westenrieder, Lorenz von". In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Band 42, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1897, S. 173–181.
  2. Van Dülmen, Richard. Der Geheimbund der Illuminaten. Stuttgart: Frommann-Holzboog, 1975.
  3. Kluckhohn, August. Über Lorenz von Westenrieders Leben und Schriften. Bamberg: Buchner, 1890.

References