Rudolf Hackl

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Rudolf Hackl (born May 18, 1881 in Munich ; † February 9, 1912 ) was a German classical archaeologist .

Rudolf Hackl, the son of the painter and academy professor Gabriel von Hackl , attended the Luitpold and Theresiengymnasium and began studying classical philology and history at Munich University after graduating in 1900 ; Otto Crusius and Friedrich Wilhelm von Bissing particularly influenced him here . From 1902 to 1903 he studied for two semesters in Gießen , where he attended events with Albrecht Dieterich and Richard Wünsch . After returning to Munich, he passed the first section of the philological-historical state examination in 1903, and the second in 1905. Adolf Furtwängler's lectures , with whom Hackl traveled to Vienna, Istria, Dalmatia and Italy, led him from philology to archeology. In 1906 he received his doctorate with the dissertation Graffiti and Dipinti on Attic vases , which he reworked in 1909 into the font Mercantile Inscriptions on Attic Vases . This fundamental work at the intersection between vase research and economic history was published in 1909 in the anthology Munich Archaeological Studies dedicated to Furtwängler .

The processing of the first catalog of the vase collection of the Staatliche Antikensammlungen in Munich was exemplary for its time . The work is often attributed to Johannes Sieveking , who however only edited it. In 1909 Hackl took part in excavations by the German Archaeological Institute in Tiryns . He died in 1912, at a young age, as a result of a lung disease. As a result, his processing of various pieces of broken fragments from the Munich collection was almost forgotten and some of his discoveries in the broken glass collection were only made again after the Second World War.

literature

  • CV, in: Rudolf Hackl: Graffiti and Dipinti on Attic vases. CH Beck, Nördling 1906 (Munich, University, phil. Dissertation from February 1, 1906).
  • Wolfgang Schiering : Appendix. In: Reinhard Lullies , Wolfgang Schiering (Ed.) Archaeologists' portraits . Portraits and short biographies of classical archaeologists in the German language. Zabern, Mainz 1988, ISBN 3-8053-0971-6 , p. 331.

Web links

supporting documents

  1. Peter Zazoff (Ed.): Opus Nobile. Festschrift for the 60th birthday of Ulf Jantzen. Steiner, Wiesbaden 1969, p. 100.
  2. Erika Kunze-Götte : Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum . Germany. 48: Munich, collections of antiquities, formerly Museum of Antique Cabaret. Vol. 9. Beck, Munich 1982, ISBN 3-406-07648-3 , p. 9.