Hubert Glaser
Hubert Glaser (born December 23, 1928 in Schweinfurt ; † June 24, 2019 ) was a German historian .
Life
Hubert Glaser studied history at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich . In 1957 he received his dissertation “Beati Dionysii qualiscumque Abbas. Studies on self-confidence and historical image of Abbot Suger of Saint-Denis ”for Dr. phil. PhD . In 1961 he was offered a position at the Pedagogical University in Essen . As early as 1964/65 Glaser had developed an initial concept for the Museum of Bavarian History , which is now in Regensburg .
From 1967 to 1969 he was the rector of the Ruhr University of Education. In 1971, Glazer was appointed to the chair for didactics of history at the Munich-Pasing University of Education , which had existed since 1973 as the educational science faculty of the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich .
In 1973, Glaser was appointed to the Bavarian State Monument Council . From 1973 to 1975 he was Dean of the Faculty of Education at the University of Munich. In 1976 Glaser took over the management of the exhibition “Elector Max Emanuel . Bavaria and Europe around 1700 ”, which attracted a large audience to Schleißheim Palace .
In 1977 he was accepted into the management of the Institute for Bavarian History . From 1978 to 1981 he headed the House of Bavarian History and in 1980 took over the management of the exhibition trilogy "Wittelsbach and Bavaria" . In 1990 Glaser was appointed to the expert committee of the German Historical Museum in Berlin . He retired five years later . Since 2003 he has been a member of the Commission for Bavarian State History at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences .
Since 1998 he has headed the DFG project " Edition of the Correspondence Between King Ludwig I and Leo von Klenze ".
Glaser concentrated his research on:
- on the regional history of Bavaria, mainly of the 18th and 19th centuries,
- to the Bavarian kings Ludwig I. , Ludwig III. and Maximilian II ,
- on Leo von Klenze as well
- on the city history of Freising
Hubert Glaser lived with his family in Freising , where he was involved in the Freising Historical Society. He was also an advisory board member in the Bayernbund and an honorary member of KBSt.V. Rhaetia Munich . He died in June 2019 at the age of 90.
Works
author
- The history of Bavaria on five partial maps: Southern German territories around 1789, scale 1: 500,000; The Kingdom of Bavaria around 1860 1: 500,000; The Romans in Bavaria around 200 AD. 1: 1,200,000; The Bavarian tribal duchy 788 1: 1 200 000; The Duchy of Bavaria around 970 1: 1 200 000 (H. Glaser, with H.-M. Körner). School wall map, 220 × 150 cm, Darmstadt 1988.
- The Bishop of Freising . In: Freising. 1250 Years of the Spiritual City, Vol. I. Ed. Peter Steiner and Hans Ramisch. Munich 1994, pp. 20-32.
- "In Bavaria the king rules and rules". Ludwig I, King of Bavaria (1786–1868). In: Peter Gauweiler , Christoph Stölzl (Hrsg.): Bavarian profiles. Munich 1995, pp. 143-172.
- On the relationship between art politics and state politics. In: King Ludwig I of Bavaria. Research questions. In: Journal for Bavarian State History 58 (1995), pp. 114–119.
- Ludwig III. King of Bavaria. Sketches from his life story. In: Catalog for the exhibition in Wildenwart. Edited by Max Oppel . Prien a. Ch. 1995, pp. 11-58.
- Ludwig II. And Ludwig III. - contrasts and continuities. In: Journal for Bavarian State History 59 (1996), pp. 1–14.
- About combinations of motifs in the building and art policy of Ludwig I. In: Norges Forskningsrad. German-Norwegian scholarship program for history. Report on the 8th German-Norwegian historians' meeting in Munich, May 1995. Oslo 1996, pp. 164–206.
- The historical galleries of Maximilian II of Bavaria. In: Winfried Nerdinger (Ed.): Between Glaspalast and Maximilianeum. Architecture in Bavaria at the time of Maximilian II of Bavaria. Catalog, Munich 1997, pp. 28-45.
- Nadie sin fructo. The Bavarian dukes and the Jesuits in the 16th century. In: Reinhold Baumstark (Ed.): Rome in Bavaria. Art and Spirituality of the First Jesuits. Catalog, Munich 1997, pp. 55-82.
- An educational experience for Crown Prince Maximilian. In: Workbooks of the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation (= workbooks , 100). Munich 1998, pp. 741-754.
- The National Museum of King Louis Philippe in the Palace of Versailles - German and Bavarian Perspectives 1837–1869. In: Ulrich Baumgärtner , Monika Fenn (Hrsg.): Münchner Geschichtsdidaktisches Kolloquium , Issue 4: History between art and politics. Munich 2002, pp. 11–31.
- Leo von Klenze's report on his first encounters with Crown Prince Ludwig of Bavaria. A study of the preface to the memorabilia. In: Konrad Ackermann , Alois Schmid , Wilhelm Volkert (eds.): Bavaria - From the trunk to the state. Festschrift for Andreas Kraus on his 80th birthday , vol. 2. Munich 2002, pp. 285–319.
- Difficult memory - About the "Kaisergrab" in the Frauenkirche in Munich and other monuments to Emperor Ludwig of Bavaria. In: Hermann Nehlsen , Hans-Georg Hermann (ed.): Kaiser Ludwig the Bavarian. Conflicts, setting the course and perception of his rule. Munich 2002, pp. 1–38.
- Observations on the history and structure of the Codex HV Ms. 318. In: The tombstone book of Ignaz Alois Frey. A testimony to Freising's historical consciousness after 1803. Ed. Hubert Glaser. Regensburg 2002, pp. 255-263.
- Ludwig I of Bavaria. Life story and guiding principles. In: City of Bozen (Ed.): The longing of a king. Ludwig I of Bavaria (1786–1868), the Romantic period and Runkelstein Castle. Bozen 2003, pp. 119-140.
- “He had momentum like nobody else” (Wilhelm von Kaulbach). King Ludwig I of Bavaria as protector of the arts. In: Herbert W. Rott (Ed.): Ludwig I. and the New Pinakothek. Cologne 2003, pp. 10–41.
- The “sensual eclectic” on the throne and his “general representative in art matters”. On the relationship between King Ludwig I of Bavaria and Leo von Klenze. In: Franziska Dunkel, Hans-Michael Körner , Hannelore Putz (eds.): King Ludwig I of Bavaria and Leo von Klenze. Munich 2004.
editor
- 34. Collective sheet of the historical association Freising. Freising 1995.
- Freising as a citizen town, 35th collective sheet of the historical association Freising. Regensburg 1996.
- 36. Collective sheet of the historical association Freising. Freising 1999.
- Freising becomes Bavarian. 37. Collective sheet of the historical association Freising. Regensburg 2002.
- The tombstone book of Ignaz Alois Frey. A testimony to Freising's historical awareness after 1803. Regensburg 2002.
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King Ludwig I of Bavaria and Leo von Klenze: The exchange of letters (= sources for the modern history of Bavaria , V). Published 2004 (I), 2007 (II), 2011 (III).
- Part I: Crown Prince's time of King Ludwig I.
- Part II: The royal period of King Ludwig I (1825–1848)
- Part III (1848 to 1864): After King Ludwig I renounced the throne.
Web links
- Literature by and about Hubert Glaser in the catalog of the German National Library
- uni-muenchen.de: Profile and Vita
Individual evidence
- ^ Hubert Glaser obituary notice. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung . Süddeutscher Verlag , June 26, 2019, accessed on June 26, 2019 .
- ↑ Hannelore Putz: "Klenze later bey me, his life as an architect is over ..." (pdf, 3.8 MB) In: AkademieAktuell: Journal of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences. 4/2010, November 29, 2010, pp. 8–11 , accessed on June 26, 2019 (on the edition project “Correspondence between King Ludwig I of Bavaria and Leo von Klenze”).
- ^ Edited by Hubert Glaser, edited by Hannelore Putz and Friedegund Freitag, in collaboration with Franziska Dunkel, Bettina Kraus, Jörg Zedler (= sources on the modern history of Bavaria , V), Munich 2011.
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Glaser, Hubert |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German historian |
DATE OF BIRTH | December 23, 1928 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Schweinfurt |
DATE OF DEATH | June 24, 2019 |