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April 19 in German History
--------------------------------- April 19, 1560
Death of Philipp Melanchthon (Philipp
Schwartzerd) in Wittenberg, Germany. Melanchthon was a friend
and enthusiastic supporter of Martin Luther. In 1518 he was
appointed at the University of Wittenberg as its first
professor of Greek. In 1521 he published Loci communes, a
systematic treatment of evangelical doctrine. (At one point
Martin Luther commented that the book deserved a place in the
cannon of Scriptures.) He was involved in the founding of the
universities of Königsberg, Jena and Marburg. At the Diet of
Augsburg ( 1530) Melanchthon was the leading Protestant
delegate and wrote the Augsburg Confession.
April 19, 1752
Birth of Friederike Brion in Niederrödern,
Elsass. She was a young woman with whom the poet, Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe fell deeply in love in the 70's. His love
to her is expressed in the poems "Willkommen und
Abschied" "Mit einem gemalten Band" and
"Mailied."
April 19, 1759
Birth of August Wilhelm Iffland in
Hannover, Germany. In 1779 Iffland played the role of Franz
Moor in Friedrich von Schiller's Die Räuber. He
remained in Mannheim where he wrote plays, directed and
acted. In 1798 he became the manager of the Berlin National
Theater and in 1811 was advanced to the director of all
Prussian theaters. He wrote his autobiography in 1798 Meine
theatralische Laufbahn.
April 19, 1793
Birth of Ferdinand I in Vienna, Austria.
Ferdinand was the Austrian emperor from 1835-1848. Although
retarded, Ferdinand was elevated to the throne to assure the
line of succession. During his reign, thus, the empire was
run by Klemens, Prinz von Metternich. Ferdinand abdicated in
the face of the revolutions of 1848.
April 19, 1795
Birth of Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg in
Delitzsch, Germany. Ehrenberg was the biologist who founded
the science of micropaleontology. He was the first to study
coral scientifically.
April 19, 1801
Birth of Theodor Gustav Fechner in
Särchen, Germany. The physicist, Fechner, was the principal
founder of psychophysics (quantitative relations between
sensations and stimuli), Elemente der Psychophysik (2
vols. 1860). He was a professor of physics at the University
of Leipzig
April 19, 1872
Birth of Alice Salomon in Berlin. Salomon
was one of the first women to earn a doctorate at the
University of Berlin. Her 1906 doctoral dissertation
approached the problem of women earning less for the same
work than men. She established Germany's first school of
social work. She was one of the founders of the International
Congress of Women in 1920. When Hitler came to power she was
forced to leave Germany and came to the United States where
she remained until her death in 1948.
April 19, 1879
Birth of Richard Schiebe in Chemnitz,
Germany.
April 19, 1883
Birth of Richard von Mises in Lemberg,
Austria-Hungary (now in Ukraine). Mises, a mathematician,
made extensive contributions to aerodynamics. He made major
advances in the understanding of air flow and advanced
airfoil design. He constructed a plane for the Austrian army
in 1915 and served as a pilot in World War I. After the war
he was a professor of mathematics at the University of
Berlin. He fled Germany in 1933 when Hitler came to power. In
1939 he took a position at Harvard University. In addition to
his work with aerodynamics he also worked in statistics and
probability.
April 19, 1917
The German Catholic Center party is able to
have the anti-Jesuit laws of 1872 repealed. The anti-Jesuit
laws were a part of a series of laws restricting the Catholic
Church and instituted under Chancellor Bismarck. The action
was called the "Kulturkampf".
April 19, 1967
Death of Konrad Adenauer in Rhöndorf, Germany. In 1917 he
became Oberbürgermeister of Cologne. An opponent of the Nazi regime, he was
sent to a concentration camp in 1944. After the war he worked in the founding
and development of the CDU political party. In 1949 he became the first chancellor
of the new Federal Republic of Germany, a post which he held until 1963.
April 19, 1973
Death of Hans Kelsen in Berkeley, California.
(Born in Prague, Austria-Hungary (now in the Czech Republic) on October
11, 1881.) Kelsen, a jurist, developed the "pure theory" of law.
Kelsen was a professor in Vienna, Cologne, Geneva and Prague. From 1920-1930
he was a judge on the Austrian Constitutional Court. He immigrated to the
U. S. in 1940 and taught at Harvard and U. C., Berkeley. Among his major
works are Hauptprobleme der Staatsrechtslehre (Chief Problems
of the Doctrine of International Law ), 1911; Allgemeine Staatslehre
(General Theory of Law and State), 1925; Reine Rechtslehre
( Pure Theory of Law), 1934; The Law of the United Nations,
1950 and Was ist Gerechtigkeit (What is Justice?), 1953.
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