Richard Loibl

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Richard Loibl (2017)

Richard Loibl (born October 26, 1965 in Straubing ) is a German historian and museum specialist and director of the House of Bavarian History in Augsburg and the House of Bavarian History - Museum in Regensburg .

Life

Richard Loibl attended primary school in Hengersberg (Deggendorf district, Lower Bavaria), then the Benedictine St. Gotthard high school in Niederaltaich . From 1985 to 1990 he studied Medieval and Modern History, Bavarian History, Art History , Historical Auxiliary Sciences and Latin Philology of the Middle Ages at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich . He completed his studies in 1990 with a Magister Artium and in 1993 with a Doctor of Philosophy. The dissertation dealt with the “domain of the Counts of Vornbach and their successors. Studies on the history of rulership in Eastern Bavaria in the High Middle Ages ”. His main research areas and topics are: cultural and urban history; Industrial history and culture; Economic history of Bavaria (Middle Ages and modern times); Constitutional history of the high Middle Ages.

From 1989 to 1990 Richard Loibl was a research assistant at the Institute for Bavarian History at LMU Munich; In 1991 he became a research assistant in the Oberhausmuseum Passau, whose fortunes he directed from 1996 as director and from 1998 as director (with the exhibitions "White Gold" (1995), "Mystery of the Brotherhood" (1996), "Knight's Castle and Prince's Castle" (1998 ), "Apocalypse" (2000), "Bavaria-Hungary. A Thousand Years" (2001, cooperation with the House of Bavarian History)). From 2001 to 2010 he headed the development staff of the State Textile and Industry Museum (tim) in Augsburg, which opened in 2010. Richard Loibl has been director of the House of Bavarian History since 2007. In addition, he is a lecturer in history at the chair for history and art studies at the LMU and has a seat on numerous committees, such as the Board of Trustees of the Coburg State Foundation, the Advisory Board of the Bavarian Economic Archives, and the Board of Trustees of the House of History Foundation of the Federal Republic of Germany.

His most important museum projects are the redesign of the Oberhausmuseum Passau, which went hand in hand with the renovation of the fortress (one of the largest in Germany). His business-oriented concept, introduced as part of the pilot project “Company City of Passau”, has received multiple regional and national awards. The establishment of the State Textile and Industry Museum (tim) in Augsburg went hand in hand with the urban development of one of the largest industrial areas in Augsburg.

In 2007 Richard Loibl took over the management of the House of Bavarian History in Augsburg.

In 2019, Charlotte Knobloch , President of the Israeli religious community in Munich and Upper Bavaria, arranged for Richard Loibl to change the title of the Bavarian state exhibition "City air makes free" into "City air liberates".

Richard Loibl has also headed the House of Bavarian History Museum in Regensburg since it opened on June 5, 2019 . He designed the museum. Together with Christoph Süß he realized the 25-minute panorama show "What happened before" for the museum.

On August 11th Richard Loibl received the “ Bavarian Language Root” from the Bund Bairische Sprache eV . The award goes to personalities who also cultivate their dialect publicly. The winners include Pope Benedict XVI, Haindling, Christian Stückl and Luise Kinseher.

Publications (selection)

  • The domain of the Counts of Vornbach and their successors. Studies on the history of rulership in Eastern Bavaria in the High Middle Ages (Historical Atlas of Bavaria: Series II, Volume 5), Munich 1997.
  • The economy of Lower Bavaria and its Chamber of Industry and Commerce (with the assistance of Thomas Heller and Jürgen Karl), Grafenau 1998.
  • The city in the late Middle Ages: Economic power and constitutional dispute, in: Egon Boshof u. a. (Ed.): History of the City of Passau, Passau 1999, pp. 97–132.
  • Passau's patricians. On the leadership of a bishopric and trading town in the late Middle Ages, in: Zeitschrift für bayerische Landesgeschichte 62 (1999), pp. 41–98.
  • To the "story" of the end times. An introduction, in: Herbert W. Wurster, Richard Loibl (Ed.): Apocalypse - Between Heaven and Hell. End times and the afterlife from the Middle Ages to the present day (catalog for the exhibition of the city and diocese of Passau in the Oberhausmuseum Passau) Passau 2000, pp. 9–26.
  • Apocalypse. Pictures from the end of time, Limburg-Kevelaer 2001.
  • Richard Loibl (Ed.), Tim - the new Bavarian Textile and Industry Museum in Augsburg, Augsburg 2005.
  • Between noble freedom and counts: the gentlemen from Kamm-Hals. A case study on the differentiation between noble and noble genders in the 12th and 13th centuries, in: Ferdinand Kramer , Wilhelm Störmer (Ed.): Edelfrei in Bayern (Studies on Bavarian Economic and Constitutional History 20) Munich 2006, pp. 379–408.
  • Textile City Augsburg and Textile Landscape Swabia, in: Werner Kraus (Ed.), Schauplätze der Industriekultur in Bayern, Regensburg 2006, pp. 26–35, 226–232.
  • What remains? Buildings of the present as monuments of the future, in: Egon Johannes Greipl (Ed.): 100 Years of the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation 1908–2008. Volume II: Perspektiven, Munich 2008, pp. 41–48.
  • Richard Loibl and Karl Borromäus Murr (eds.): State Textile and Industry Museum Augsburg, Museum Guide Augsburg 2010.
  • "Worsted, woolen and cotton scarves ..." - textile production in the industrial region of Upper Franconia in the 19th century, in: Karl Borromäus Murr, Wolfgang Wüst, Werner K. Blessing and Peter Fassl (eds.): Die Süddeutsche Textillandschaft, Augsburg 2010, p 67-84.
  • Götterdämmerung: King Ludwig II and Bavaria - Myth and Reality. An introduction to the exhibition, in: Peter Wolf, Margot Hamm, Richard Loibl and Evamaria Brockhoff (eds.): Götterdämmerung. King Ludwig II. (Catalog for the Bavarian State Exhibition 2011) Augsburg 2011.
  • Foreword, in: Wolfgang Jahn, Evamaria Brockhoff (Ed.): Allied. Enemies. Related by marriage. Bavaria and Austria. Catalog for the Bavarian-Upper Austrian State Exhibition 2012, Augsburg 2012.
  • Main and sea. The exhibition, in: Rainhard Riepertinger, Evamaria Brockhoff, Michael Nadler and Ralf Skoruppa (eds.): Main und Meer. Catalog for the Bavarian State Exhibition 2013, Augsburg 2013.
  • We are Kaiser !, in: Peter Wolf, Evamaria Brockhoff, Elisabeth Handle-Schubert, Andreas Th. Jell and Barbara Six (eds.): Ludwig der Bayer. We are emperors! Catalog for the Bavarian State Exhibition 2014, Augsburg 2014.
  • Napoleon and Bavaria. An introduction, in: Margot Hamm, Evamaria Brockhoff, Volker Bräu, Stefanie Buchhold, Uta Lerche (eds.): Napoleon and Bavaria. Catalog for the Bavarian State Exhibition 2015, Augsburg 2015.
  • A thousand and five hundred years of Bavaria, in: Bavarian State Chancellery (Hrsg.): Bavaria. Country in the heart of Europe, Munich 2015.
  • The interactive museum. A house of the future for the history of the present, in: Bayerische Staatskanzlei (Hrsg.): Bavaria. Country in the heart of Europe, Munich 2015.
  • Bavaria - the constitutional state, in: Bayerische Staatskanzlei (Hrsg.): Bavaria. Country in the heart of Europe, Munich 2015.
  • Bavaria from the revolution to the end of the Nazi dictatorship, in: Bayerische Staatskanzlei (Hrsg.): Bavaria. Country in the heart of Europe, Munich 2015.
  • Beer in Bavaria, a myth within a myth? An introduction, in: Rainhard Riepertinger, Evamaria Brockhoff, Cindy Drexl, Andreas-Michael Kuhn and Michael Nadler (eds.): Beer in Bavaria. Catalog for the Bavarian State Exhibition 2016, Augsburg 2016.
  • The state exhibition on the anniversary of the Reformation in Bavaria, in: Peter Wolf, Evamaria Brockhoff, Fabian Fiederer, Alexandra Franz and Constantin Groth (eds.): Knights, farmers, Lutherans. Catalog for the Bavarian State Exhibition 2017, Augsburg 2017.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Lecturer at the Chair for History and Art Studies at LMU ". August 15, 2019, accessed on August 15, 2019 (German).
  2. Bavarian State Exhibition is renamed: "City air liberated". April 2, 2019, accessed April 5, 2019 (German).
  3. HDBG-Magazin, EDITION BAYERN, Issue 1 - 360 ° Panorama. Retrieved on September 21, 2019 (German).
  4. The "Bavarian Language Root" goes to Richard Loibl. August 11, 2019, accessed on August 30, 2019 (German).