Klaus Müller (historian)

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Klaus Müller (born May 13, 1936 in Siegen ) is a German historian and professor emeritus.

Life

Klaus Müller studied history and English at the universities of Marburg , Bonn and Hull . In 1962 he received his doctorate in Bonn. In 1970 he also completed his habilitation in Bonn. From 1971 to 1999 he was Professor of Modern History at the University of Düsseldorf .

Müller lives in Korschenbroich .

Fonts (excerpt)

As an author:

  • Political currents in the districts on the right bank of the Rhine in the administrative district of Cologne (Sieg, Mülheim, Wipperfürth, Gummersbach and Waldbröl) from 1879 to 1900. Bonn 1962 (dissertation, University of Bonn, 1962).
  • The imperial legation system in the century after the Peace of Westphalia (1648–1740). Röhrscheid, Bonn 1976 (habilitation thesis, University of Bonn, 1970).
  • Cologne from French to Prussian rule 1794–1815 (= History of the City of Cologne. Vol. 8). Greven, Cologne 2005.
  • Jan Wellem. A baroque prince in Düsseldorf (= Radschläger series. Vol. 2). Droste, Düsseldorf 2008.
  • Ferdinand Franz Wallraf. Scholar, collector, honorary citizen of Cologne 1748–1824 . Published by Historical Society Cologne, Greven, Cologne 2017, ISBN 9783774306806 .

As editor / editor:

  • (Editor) Absolutism and the Age of the French Revolution (1715–1815) ( Source studies on German history in the modern era from 1500 to the present. Vol. 3). Scientific Book Society, Darmstadt 1982.
  • (Editor) Sources on the history of the Congress of Vienna 1814/1815 (= selected sources on German history in modern times. Vol. 23). Scientific Book Society, Darmstadt 1986.
  • (Editor) Constructivism: Teaching - Learning - Aesthetic Processes. Luchterhand, Neuwied 1996.
  • (Editor) Neuss (= Rheinischer Städteatlas. Vol. 49). Böhlau, Cologne 2011, ISBN 978-3-412-20589-8 .
  • (Editor) Düsseldorf (= Rheinischer Städteatlas. Vol. 100). Böhlau, Cologne 2015, ISBN 978-3-412-22523-0 .

Individual evidence

  1. Kürschner's German Scholar Calendar . 18th edition (2001). Vol. 2, p. 2181.
  2. ^ Karlheinz Gierden (ed.): The Rhineland - Cradle of Europe? A search for traces from Agrippina to Adenauer. Lübbe, Cologne 2011, p. 283.
  3. a b Herbert Napp: Neuss in the Rhenish City Atlas. In: NGZ Online . December 11, 2011, accessed on September 7, 2014 (with photography by Klaus Müller).