Ernst Perels

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Stumbling stone in front of the house, Weddigenweg 64, in Berlin-Lichterfelde

Ernst Perels (born August 2, 1882 in Berlin , † May 10, 1945 in Flossenbürg ) was a German historian .

Ernst Perel's father Ferdinand Perels had converted to the Protestant faith as the son of Jewish parents. Ernst Perels received his doctorate in 1904 with a thesis on the church tithes in the Carolingian Empire under Michael Tangl and Max Lenz . He completed his habilitation in 1911 at the University of Berlin . In 1904, Perels entered the service of the Monumenta Germaniae Historica (MGH) through Michael Tangl's mediation . From 1911 to 1935 Ernst Perels taught historical auxiliary sciences and medieval history at the history seminar of the Friedrich Wilhelms University . Since 1916 predicate professor and since 1921 associate professor, he held the chair for historical auxiliary sciences since 1923, whereby in 1923 he gave up his permanent employment with the MGH. In 1931 he was appointed personal professor and co-director of the historical seminar. In 1935 he was expelled from the university because of his Jewish origins and was forced into retirement. Numerous ecclesiastical and canonical studies come from him.

Because of the support of his son Friedrich Justus for the failed assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler on July 20, 1944 , Perels was taken into kin custody in October 1944 and first deported to the Buchenwald concentration camp and later to the Flossenbürg concentration camp . Shortly after the liberation of the Flossenbürg camp, he died of exhaustion.

Fonts

A list of publications appeared in Ines Oberling: Ernst Perels (1882–1945). Teacher and researcher at the Berlin University. Publishing house for regional history, Bielefeld 2005, ISBN 3-89534-452-4 , pp. 246-254.

  • 1904 Church tithe in the Carolingian Empire
  • 1911 The origins of the Carolingian tithe law
  • 1912/1925 letters from Popes Nicholas I and Hadrian II.
  • 1920 Pope Nicholas I and Anastasius Bibliothecarius
  • 1922 A memorandum from Hinkmar of Reims in the Rothad von Soissons trial
  • 1927 inheritance plan of Heinrich VI.
  • 1930 “Liber de vita christiana” by Bishop Bonizo of Sutri
  • 1939 letters from Bishop Hinkmar of Reims

literature

Web links

Wikisource: Ernst Perels  - Sources and full texts

Remarks

  1. ^ Ines Oberling:  Perels, Ernst Joachim Friedrich Hans. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 20, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-428-00201-6 , p. 181 f. ( Digitized version ).