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August 9 in German History
--------------------------------- August 9, 378
At the Battle of Adrianople, the Visigoths
defeat the Romans.
August 9, 1048
Death of Pope Damasus II, the third German
pope. Originally named Poppo, he was born in Bavaria. He was
the Bishop of Brixen in Tyrol when Heinrich III nominated him
as pope. He was enthroned as pope on July 17, 1048 but soon
after arival in Rome contracted malaria and died after 23
days as pope.
August 9, 1828
Death of the philosopher, Friedrich
Bouterwek in Göttingen, Germany. Bouterwek was a follower of
Immanuel Kant in his earlier years, but drew away from Kant's
philosophy later. He was a professor of philosophy at the
University of Göttingen. Influential works by Bouterwek
include, Geschichte der neueren Poesie und Beredsamkeit (12
vols. 1801-1819), Lehrbuch der philosophischen
Wissenschaften (1813), and Religion und Vernunft (1824).
August 9, 1854
Death of Friedrich Augustus II, king of
Saxony, in the Tyrol, Austria (born in Dresden, Germany).
Friedrich Augustus had granted a certain degree of democratic
reform in Saxony prior to 1848. However, he felt that the
constitution adopted by the Frankfurt Assembly of 1848 went
too far and refused to support it. As a result he experienced
a revolt among his own people in 1849 which he was able to
put down only with the help of Prussian troops.
August 9, 1919
Death of Ernst Haeckel in Jena, Germany.
Haeckel, a student of zoology, was inspired by Darwin's book The
Origin of Species which was published when he was 25. He
himself became a professor at the University of Jena and
spent his professional career promoting the ideas of Darwin
and attempting to further the understanding of the
evolutionary process. Though many of the theories he proposed
showed themselves to be flawed in subsequent years of
research, he did much to stimulate basic questions in the
study of biology. His reputation was much darkened by the
Nazis, who attempted to justify their own practices on the
basis of Haeckel's ideas. Haeckel remains a controversial
figure.
August 9, 1936
In Berlin the American, Jesse Owens, wins
his 4th gold medal at the Olympic games.
August 9*, 1942
Murder of Edith Stein in Auschwitz. Stein
converted from Judaism to Catholicism (1904) and became a
Carmelite nun. She earned her doctorate at the University of
Göttingen in philosophy. She subsequently taught at
Göttingen. She became a teacher at the Institute for
Pedagogy in Münster in 1932, but had to resign shortly
thereafter due to growing antisemitism in Germany. She
entered the Carmelite convent in Cologne in 1934 taking the
name, Teresa Benedicta of the Cross. In 1938 due to
increasing Nazi pressure she moved to the convent in Echt,
Holland. There she was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to
the concentration camp at Auschwitz where she was murdered in
a gas chamber. She was beatified in 1987. Works by Stein
include Endliches und ewiges Sein, and Studie über
Jonnes a Cruce: Kreuzeswissenschaft.
* There is some uncertainty as to the time of
her death. She may have died on the 10th.
August 9, 1962
Death of Hermann Hesse in Montagnola,
Switzerland. Hesse has enjoyed several waves of intense
popularity of his novels and short stories. He was awarded
the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1946.
August 9, 1976
Death of Karl Schmidt-Rottluff in West
Berlin, Germany. The artist was a member of the group, Die
Brücke. An Expressionist and at times Cubist, he was
growing in his art in Berlin when the Nazis came to power. He
was forbidden to paint in a style he could understand as
artistic. After the war he returned to painting.
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