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January
4 in German History
---------------------------------
January 4, 1428
Death of Friedrich I (also called Friedrich der Streitbare) in Altenburg,
Germany. Friedrich became the Elector of Saxony in the Holy Roman Empire.
He assisted the emperor, Sigismund, in a campaign against the Bohemian
adherents of Jan Hus in 1420.
January 4, 1675
Birth of Bl. Liberatus (Johannes Laurentius Weiß) in Konnersreuth,
Germany (near Bayreuth). He entered the Franciscan order at age 18, taking
the name Liberatus. He was ordained in 1698. He became a missionary to
Ethiopia. He worked there until 1716 to bring the Ethiopian church back
into accord with the Roman Church. In 1716 he was put to death by stoning
in reaction against his efforts. He was beatified by Pope John Paul II
in 1988.
January 4, 1785
Jakob Grimm is born in Hanau, Germany. Along with his brother, Wilhelm,
he is known most for the Grimms' fairy tales, published as Kinder-
und Hausmärchen (1812-1822). But the brothers did a huge amount
of work which is equally important but less known. Between 1816-18 they
published Deutsche Sagen, a collection of German legends. Between
1819 and 1837 Jakob prepared a complete German grammar, Deutsche Grammatik.
His work in linguistics led to a new science. Grimm's law in linguistics
is named for Jakob Grimm. He further published an analysis of ancient
Germanic law, Deutsche Rechtsaltertümer. The most extensive
work undertaken by the brothers was the complete German dictionary, Deutsches
Wörterbuch. The work was so extensive that neither lived to see
it completed. Scholars continued the work after the Grimms' deaths and
finally finished it about a century after they had started it. Jakob also
published a history of the German language, Geschichte der deutschen
Sprache.
January 4, 1786
Death of the philosopher, Moses Mendelssohn, in Berlin, Germany. His
work contributed significantly to the ability of Jews to integrate into
German society. He was a friend of the dramatist Gotthold Ephriam Lessing
and influenced the character, Nathan, in the Lessing play, Nathan der
Weise. In his own life Mendelssohn was given the appellation "the
German Socrates." His grandson was the composer Felix Mendelssohn.
January 4, 1797
Birth of Wilhelm Beer in Berlin, Germany. Beer, an amateur astronomer,
constructed the most complete map of the moon of his times, Mappa Selenographica.
The map was published in 1836.
January 4, 1839
Birth of Karl Humann in Steele, Germany. Humann was an archaeologist
who, under the auspices of the Berlin Museum, excavated the ancient Greek
city of Pergamum in modern-day Turkey. He also excavated the Greek city
of Magnesia, another ancient city located in modern Turkey.
January 4, 1881
Birth of Wilhelm Lehmbruck in Meiderich, Germany. Lehmbruck was an Expressionist
sculptor. He also created prints and paintings.
January 4, 1913
Death of Alfred Graf von Schlieffen in Berlin, Germany. Schlieffen was
the general who developed the "Schlieffen Plan" which was used
in World War I to deal with a two-front war. The plan called for an initial
massive attack on France with the assumption that Russia would mobilize
sufficiently slowly to allow the completion of hostilities in the West
before forces would be needed in the East. Schlieffen died the year before
the outbreak of war. When the plan was actually used, Schlieffen had been
replaced by Helmuth von Moltke, who made modifications of his own.
January 4, 1930
Birth of Bernhard Lehner (1930 - 1944) in Herrngiersdorf near Regensburg.
At age 13 he fell ill and was hospitalized. After 10 weeks of intense
suffering which he accepted with dedication to God, he died. He is said
to have had healing powers during this period and helped others in their
illnesses. He was buried in his home town. Many began to regard him as
a saint. In 1950 the process of beatification was initiated by the Church.
On September 12, 1952 his remains were moved from the local cemetary to
the church. 20,000 people came to participate.
January 4, 1933
In an attempt to gain power, Franz von Papen makes a deal with Hitler
and is able to have him appointed chancellor. Von Papen believed he would
be able to control Hitler and the Nazis.
January 4, 1947
The first issue of the news magazine Der Spiegel is published.
It had been started as a publication under the authority of the British
occupation forces. In 1947 it was thought that the Germans could be trusted
to publish a new magazine without British oversight. The name was then
changed from Diese Woche to Der Spiegel. The publication
has come out every week since then as a news magazine with a format similar
to the American Time magazine.
January 4, 1957
Death of Theodor Körner in Vienna, Austria. Körner was a colonel
in the Austrian army when World War I began. By 1915 he had risen to the
office of chief of staff. He was named inspector general of the new Austrian
army after the war. He then became a delegate to the Bundesrat. He opposed
the merger with Germany in 1938. After World War II he became the mayor
of Vienna. In 1951 he was elected the president of Austria.
January 4, 1961
Death of Erwin Schrödinger in Vienna, Austria. Schrödinger
was a theoretical physicist who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1933
for his work on the wave theory of matter. He was on the faculty at the
University of Berlin until 1933 when he resigned and left due to growing
Nazi influence in Germany.
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