Ferdinand von Zieglauer

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ferdinand von Zieglauer (born February 28, 1829 in Bruneck , Tyrol , † July 28, 1906 in Czernowitz ) was an Austrian historian .

Life

Ferdinand von Zieglauer attended the Akademisches Gymnasium Innsbruck and studied first law , then history at the University of Innsbruck and the University of Vienna . From 1852 he was with Joseph Aschbach and Hermann Bonitz , from 1855 at the new Institute for Austrian Historical Research . To the Dr. phil. after receiving his doctorate , he received an extraordinary position at the Transylvanian-Saxon Law Academy in Sibiu , Transylvania, by imperial decision on September 28, 1856 . There he became full professor on November 2, 1862 .

When it was founded in 1875, he came to the Franz Joseph University in the capital of Bucovina . In 1876/77 he was her second rector .

He was an honorary citizen of Chernivtsi.

Works

  • About the time of the creation of the so-called oldest Austrian land law , 1856. GoogleBooks
  • Harteneck, Count of the Saxon Nation and the Transylvanian party struggles of his time. 1691-1703 . Sibiu 1869. GoogleBooks
  • On the history of the Kreuzcapelle in the Elisabethvorstadt of Sibiu . Sibiu 1875
  • Three years from the Rákoczy revolution in Transylvania. From the outbreak of movement to the Battle of Sibó . New series of the archive of the Association for Transylvanian Regional Studies, Vol. 8, pp. 163–283
  • History of the Masonic Lodge St. Andreas to the three sea leaves in Sibiu 1767–1790 . 1876
  • The political reform movement in Transylvania at the time of Joseph II and Leopold II , 1885. GoogleBooks
  • The liberation of Oven from Turkish rule in 1686. A contribution to the bicentenary commemoration , 1886; Reprint 2012.
  • Historical images from Bukovina at the time of the Austrian occupation , 1893. GoogleBooks
  • Historical sheets from Bukovina at the time of the Austrian military administration , 1895. GoogleBooks
  • The development of the school system in Bukovina since the unification of the country with Austria 1774-1899 , 1899. GoogleBooks

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. J. Trausch (BLKÖ)
  2. Rector's speech (HKM)