Franz Zauner (art historian)

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Franz Paul Zauner (born March 29, 1876 in Fisching, a district of Waging am See , † 1943 ) was a German art historian and writer.

Zauner was born as the son of the farmer Donat Zauner and Margaretha Feil. His education he received at the high school in Schäftlarn , Kloster Scheyern and Freising (Abitur 1895). He first studied theology at the Philosophical-Theological University of Freising and was ordained a priest in 1900. He then worked as a cooperator in Eching (Landshut district) and Hohenbrunn . In 1904 he became a beneficiary of St. Leonhard in Siegertsbrunn , a branch church of the Hohenbrunn parish. In 1917 he became pastor in Oberweikertshofen , in 1923 pastor in Petershausen (1936 freely resigned). From 1939 to 1943 he was Preysingscher Schlossbenefiziat in Kronwinkl (parish Eching near Landshut).

Zauner studied art history from 1910 to 1914 at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich . He traveled abroad to Italy, where he continued his studies at the private art history institute in Florence. His work includes descriptions of the art monuments of Munich and the Oberland. In 1959, the city of Munich honored his memory by naming a street.

literature

  • Herrmann AL Degener : Degeners Who is it? - 10th edition - Berlin: Degener, 1935
  • Schematism of the clergy of the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising for 1939 (as of February 1, 1939), Munich 1939, p. 220.

Fonts

  • Siegertsbrunn, its Leonhardi pilgrimage church and the Leonhardifahrt. Siegertsbrunn 1909. (extended reprint 1995)
  • Munich's surroundings in art and history A description of 362 places, left and right of the Isar, with their geological, prehistoric, historical and art-historical peculiarities. Lindauer, Munich 1914.
  • The pulpits of Tuscany from the Romanesque style period. Borna near Leipzig 1915. (Dissertation, Munich 1914.)
  • Oberammergau and the surrounding area. Benediktbeuern, Ettal, Garmisch, Kochel, Mittenwald, Murnau, Partenkirchen etc. (with appendix "The Royal Castles") Kempten 1922.
  • Bad Wörishofen and the surrounding area. A guide. Munich 1922.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Quart catalog of the Bavarian State Library. Retrieved November 8, 2019 .