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February
8 in German History
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February 8, 1487
Birth of Ulrich in Reichenweier, Germany.
Ulrich was the Herzog of Württemberg from 1498. Due to
political problems he was removed from his position by fellow
nobles in 1519. Through political intrigues he regained
control of Württemberg in 1534. At that time he dissolved
the monasteries, confiscated church lands and invited
Protestant theologians to reform the church in Württemberg.
(Luther had been excommunicated in 1520.)
February 8, 1744
Birth of Karl Theodor von Dalberg in
Herrnsheim, Germany. Dalberg was the Archbishop of Mainz and
Elector of the Holy Roman Empire (1802), the Primate of
Germany (1803) and the President of the Confederation of the
Rhine (1806). Dalberg died on February 10, 1817 in
Regensburg.
February 8, 1795

Birth of Friedlieb Ferdinand Runge (1795-1867) in
Hamburg, Germany. The chemist, Runge was a professor at the
University of Breslau before he accepted a position as an
industrial chemist in Oranienburg in 1831. He isolated and
named carbolic acid, pyrrole, rosolic acid and cyanol. He
originated the technique of paper chromatography and
developed a process for extracting sugar from beets.
February 8, 1871
Death of Moritz von Schwind in Munich,
Germany. Schwind was a very popular painter of
romantic-idealized themes. For a time he was a close friend
of Franz Schubert. In 1847 he became a teacher at the Munich
Academy.
February 8, 1874
Death of David Friedrich Strauss in
Ludwigsburg, Germany. Strauss was a highly controversial
Protestant theologian, influenced in his thinking by the
philosophy of Friedrich Hegel. His first major work Das
Leben Jesu kritisch bearbeitet (1836) sought to prove the
gospels to be simply "historical myth". His last
publication, Der alte und der neue Glaube (1872) was
no less controversial, as he sought to replace Christianity
with a form of Darwinism.
February 8, 1876

Birth of Paula Modersohn-Becker (1876-1907) in Dresden,
Germany. Modersohn-Becker was a German painter and one of the most important representatives of early expressionism. In a brief career, cut short by an embolism at the age of 31, she created a number of groundbreaking images of great intensity.
February 8, 1878
Birth of Martin Buber in Vienna, Austria.
Buber was a Jewish religious philosopher most noted for his
interest in the relationships between beings. His book Ich
und Du appeared in 1923. He earned his doctorate at the
University of Vienna. Buber was influenced by Nicholas of
Cusa, Jakob Böhme and Friedrich Nietzsche. From 1916 to 1924
he edited the intellectual monthly, Der Jude. In 1934
he became the head of Jewish adult education in Nazi Germany.
When the Nazis forbade him to teach, he immigrated to
Palestine.
February 8, 1880

Birth of Franz Marc (1880-1916) in Munich, Germany. An
Expressionist painter, Marc was a founding member of the
artists group "Der blaue Reiter". He also edited
the journal, Der blaue Reiter with Wassily Kandinsky.
Noted paintings by Marc are "Tiger", "Blue
Horses" and "The Yellow Cow".
February 8, 1886
Birth of Wilhelm Koppers in Menzelen,
Germany. A Catholic priest, Koppers worked to establish a
comparative, historical approach to cultural phenomena. He
was an editor of the journal, Anthropos. He was a
professor of ethnology at the University of Vienna.
February 8, 1897
Birth of Rudolf Dreikurs in Vienna,
Austria. A psychologist, Dreikurs developed the individual
psychology of Alfred Adler and applied it to children. He
earned his M.D. at the University of Vienna. He immigrated to
the United States in 1937 where he founded the Alfred Adler
Institute in Chicago.
February 8, 1916
Death of Gustav Falk in Luebeck, Germany.
Falk was a poet and novelist. Among his noted poems are
"Hohe Sommertage" and Frohe Fracht".
February 8, 1920
Death of Richard Dehmel in Blankenese,
Germany. Dehmel was a poet who explored themes on
individualism, social injustice, sexuality and love. Works by
Dehmel include Erlösungen (1891), Weib und Welt (1896),
and Schöne wilde Welt (1913).
February 8, 1950
The East German government passes a law
creating a Ministry of State Security (Staatssicherheit).
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