Difference between revisions of "Otto Jahn"

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(Created page with "Otto Jahn <ref name="term_75270" /> <p> Philologist and archæologist, born at Kiel; after holding the post of lecturer at Kiel and Greifswald he, in 1847, was appointed to t...")
 
 
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Otto Jahn <ref name="term_75270" />  
 
<p> Philologist and archæologist, born at Kiel; after holding the post of lecturer at Kiel and Greifswald he, in 1847, was appointed to the chair of [[Archæology]] in Leipzig; becoming involved in the political troubles of 1848-49, he lost his professorial position, but subsequently held similar appointments at Bonn and Berlin; his voluminous writings, which cover the field of [[Greek]] and [[Roman]] art and literature, and include valuable contributions to the history of music, are of first-rate importance (1813-1869). </p>
Otto Jahn <ref name="term_75270" />
==References ==
<p> Philologist and archæologist, born at Kiel; after holding the post of lecturer at [[Kiel]] and Greifswald he, in 1847, was appointed to the chair of [[Archæology]] in Leipzig; becoming involved in the political troubles of 1848-49, he lost his professorial position, but subsequently held similar appointments at [[Bonn]] and Berlin; his voluminous writings, which cover the field of Greek and Roman art and literature, and include valuable contributions to the history of music, are of first-rate importance (1813-1869). </p>
 
== References ==
<references>
<references>
<ref name="term_75270"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/jahn,+otto Otto Jahn from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref>
<ref name="term_75270"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/jahn,+otto Otto Jahn from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref>
</references>
</references>

Latest revision as of 17:34, 15 October 2021

Otto Jahn [1]

Philologist and archæologist, born at Kiel; after holding the post of lecturer at Kiel and Greifswald he, in 1847, was appointed to the chair of Archæology in Leipzig; becoming involved in the political troubles of 1848-49, he lost his professorial position, but subsequently held similar appointments at Bonn and Berlin; his voluminous writings, which cover the field of Greek and Roman art and literature, and include valuable contributions to the history of music, are of first-rate importance (1813-1869).

References