Roger Wilmans Explained

Franz Friedrich Roger Wilmans (18 July 1812, in Bielefeld  - 28 January 1881, in Münster) was a German historian and archivist.

From 1832 he studied philology and history at the University of Berlin, receiving his doctorate in 1835 with a dissertation on Cassius Dio, De Dionis Cassii fontibus et auctoritate. Afterwards, he worked as a schoolteacher at the Cadet Corps and Joachimsthal Gymnasium in Berlin. In 1851 he succeeded Heinrich August Erhard as director of the provincial archives in Münster, a position he maintained up until his death in 1881.[1]

Selected works

He made important contributions to the Monumenta Germaniae Historica, that included editions of works by Otto von Freising.[2] Among his other principal writings are the following:

In the Westfälisches Urkundenbuch (Westphalian register) he published:

Notes and References

  1. https://de.wikisource.org/wiki/ADB:Wilmans,_Roger ADB:Wilmans, Roger
  2. http://www.mgh.de/bibliothek/opac/?wa72ci_url=/cgi-bin/mgh/regsrchindex.pl?wert=wilmans,+roger&recnums=:4121:6822:7000:7895:8054:8501:10187:12152:31583:34846:38531:45136:50127:102363:107641:107789:107835:107869:108073:142063:142068:142074:142208:142509:142553:150256:160397:191996:199724:208548:211848:215615:220951&index=1&db=opac Monumenta Germaniae Historica
  3. https://de.wikisource.org/wiki/Roger_Wilmans Roger Wilmans