Manfred Bambeck
Manfred Bambeck (born September 11, 1918 in Wintersbach , † July 23, 1985 in Alzenau ) was a German Romanist .
Life
Bambeck received his doctorate in 1954 in Frankfurt under Erhard Lommatzsch on death and immortality: study of the French Renaissance attitude towards life based on the work of Ronsard and qualified as a professor in Heidelberg in 1964 with Boden und Werkwelt. Investigations into the vocabulary of the Galloromania on the basis of non-literary texts (Tübingen 1968). In 1966 he was appointed to a chair for Romance philology in Frankfurt. In 1981 he was one of the signatories of the Heidelberg Manifesto .
Works
- Latin-Romance word studies (studies on the language and literary history of the Romance peoples 1), Wiesbaden 1959
- Divine Comedy and Exegesis , Berlin / New York 1975
- (Editor together with Hans Helmut Christmann in connection with Erich von Richthofen ) Philologica Romanica. Dedicated to Erhard Lommatzsch , Munich 1975
- Studies on Dante's Paradiso. Wiesbaden 1979
- The saying in the picture: "The forest has ears, the field has eyes": to a drawing by Hieronymus Bosch , Academy of Sciences and Literature, Wiesbaden 1987
literature
- Manfred Bambeck, Wiesel and Werewolf. Typological forays into the Romanesque Middle Ages and the Renaissance , edited by Friedrich Wolfschrift and Hans-Joachim Lotz, Stuttgart 1990, pages IX to XV (acknowledgment by the editors)
Web links
- Literature by and about Manfred Bambeck in the catalog of the German National Library
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Bambeck, Manfred |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German Romanist |
DATE OF BIRTH | September 11, 1918 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Wintersbach |
DATE OF DEATH | July 23, 1985 |
Place of death | Alzenau |