University of Ingolstadt
University of Ingolstadt | |
---|---|
activity | June 26, 1472 - 1800 (moved to Landshut in 1800 (→ University of Landshut ); since 1826 in Munich (→ Ludwig Maximilians University )) |
Sponsorship | state |
place | Ingolstadt |
country | Duchy of Bavaria , Electorate of Bavaria |
The University of Ingolstadt was in 1472 in Ingolstadt by Duke Ludwig the Rich of Lower Bavaria with papal approval, the so-called privilege of being the first Bavarian founded university. It was moved to Landshut in 1800 and from there to Munich in 1826 , where it continues to exist as the Ludwig Maximilians University .
history
founding
“The plague only rages here very rarely […]. There are also forests around the city, inviting for walks as well as for hunting. In the city there are wonderful churches, strangely the temple of Our Lady, which offers enough space for big academic celebrations [...]. The houses are spacious, some magnificent, they contain apartments for more than a thousand students [...]. The wine is a bit expensive, the meat is good, the bread is excellent and the Danube supplies as much fish as it is delicious. "
As early as 1458, Duke Ludwig the Rich approached Pope Pius II with the proposal to establish a university, which Pius approved in a bull on April 7, 1459. Due to financial difficulties, the university could only be opened on June 26, 1472. The honor of the Latin opening speech went to the ducal councilor Martin Mair . The search for a suitable building was tedious; finally the bishop of Eichstätt made the beneficiary house available. This enabled the eleventh university in the Holy Roman Empire to be built in Ingolstadt . The first rector was Christoph Mendel von Steinfels . At the time of his appointment, 489 students were already enrolled. At the University of Ingolstadt, a studium generale was initially set up with the four classical faculties of theology, law, medicine and artes liberales . The latter was a preparatory course for a university career, from which the philosophical faculty later developed. The founding bull also already covered "any other faculty" ( qualibet alia licita facultate ). The students were able to acquire the following academic degrees in ascending order: Baccalaureus , Sententiarius , Licentiatus and finally the Magister .
The theological faculty began teaching in the person of Johannes Ludovici in March 1472, i.e. before the official opening. On February 9, 1473 Johannes Adorf was appointed the first Doctor theologiae . That Johannes Adorf and Georg Zingel , won for the faculty in 1475, were the first two full professors of the theological faculty; they shaped their first three decades. The penniless theology student took on the Georgianum donated by Duke Georg the Rich from 1494 .
Flowering in the 16th century
Humanism was the first German university to gain a foothold in Ingolstadt before 1500 . Hebrew was taught since 1505 and Greek since 1515. Great scholars of this time were, for example, the humanist Konrad Celtis , the historian Johannes Aventinus (Johann Turmayr) and the Jesuit Petrus Canisius . The Ingolstadt theologian Johannes Eck made Ingolstadt a spiritual center of the Counter Reformation . After Eck's death in 1543, some of the university passed into the hands of the Jesuit order, just as almost all Catholic universities were run by the Jesuits until the order was abolished in 1773. One of the most important rectors of the university was the Jesuit Petrus Canisius in the middle of the 16th century. Emperor Ferdinand II and King Maximilian I of Bavaria studied at the University of Ingolstadt. In its heyday, over 1,000 students were enrolled at the high school.
Development in the 17th and 18th centuries
The city became a fortress in 1539. In the Thirty Years War it was hard fought over; the university suffered greatly and did not recover after 1648.
Attempts at reform began in the middle of the 18th century. Ingolstadt, along with the University of Cologne, was probably the most important German Catholic university of the early modern times, in terms of student frequency after the Reformation only surpassed by the large Protestant universities in Leipzig , Jena , Wittenberg (later Halle ) and Göttingen as well as Königsberg ("Albertina") .
Relocation to Landshut and Munich
Due to the confusion caused by the founding of the Illuminati Order by Ingolstadt professor Adam Weishaupt in 1778, however, with his suppression, intolerance once again set in in Ingolstadt. When the new Elector Max IV. Joseph (later King Maximilian I) of Bavaria and his minister Count Montgelas started reforms again in 1799, the university was relocated to Landshut (→ University of Landshut ) in 1800 before the approaching war . 26 years later, in 1826, King Ludwig I brought the university to the capital Munich (→ Ludwig Maximilians University Munich ).
Well-known professors and functionaries
image | Surname | Life dates | Faculty / Chair | function | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Balthasar Adelmann | 1645-1713 | Catholic theology | professor | from 1688 professor of ethics; Jesuit | |
Caspar Adelmann | 1641-1703 | Catholic theology | professor | from 1679 professor; Student from 1659; Jesuit | |
Joseph Adelmann | 1648-1693 | Hebrew Studies physics |
professor | from 1679 professor; Student in Ingolstadt; Jesuit | |
Johannes Adorf | † 1505 | Catholic theology | professor | Theologian, pastor of St. Marien | |
Johann Agricola | 1496-1570 | medicine | professor | from 1531 professor; doctor | |
Veit Amerbach | 1503-1557 | philosophy | professor | from 1543 professor; Scholar; humanist | |
Peter Apian | 1495-1552 | mathematics | professor | Mathematician, astronomer, geographer | |
Philipp Apian | 1531-1589 | mathematics | professor | Mathematician , doctor , cartographer | |
Beda Aschenbrenner | 1756-1817 | law Sciences | professor | from 1789 professor of canon law; first lectures in German instead of Latin | |
Johannes Aventinus | 1477-1534 | Latin Studies | Private lecturer | Pioneer of classical philology in Germany; Student in Ingolstadt | |
Christoph Besold | 1577-1638 | law Sciences | professor | ||
Joseph Biner | 1697-1766 | philosophy | professor | Swiss Jesuit | |
Johann Lonaeus van den Bosch (Johannes Lonäus Boscius) |
1514-1585 | Medicine; Artist faculty | professor | from 1558 professor of rhetoric; from 1560 medical professionals | |
Franz Burckhard (Burckhardt) | Catholic theology | professor | |||
Peter Burckhard | 1461-1526 | medicine | professor | 1520 rector; Dean 1521 | |
Adam Burghaber | 1608-1687 | philosophy | professor | ||
Nicolas de Bourgogne | 1586-1649 | Jurisprudence | professor | Bavarian councilor, court historian and count palatine | |
Heinrich Canisius | 1557-1610 | law Sciences | professor | Professor of Canon Law; Nephew of St. Peter Canisius | |
Petrus Canisius | 1521-1597 | Catholic theology | professor | also rector; Saint , doctor of the church , writer , Jesuit | |
Joseph Anton Carl | 1725-1799 | chemistry Medicine |
professor | ||
Conrad Celtis | 1459-1508 | rhetoric poetics |
professor | Humanist and poet | |
Johann Friedrich von Chardel | 1673-1713 | Jurisprudence | professor | Rector | |
Jerome of Croaria | 1460 / 63-1527 | law Sciences | professor | Professor of Canon Law; Judge of the Swabian Federation | |
Johann Baptist Cysat | 1586-1657 | mathematics | professor | Discovered sunspots in 1611 with his teacher and predecessor Christoph Scheiner | |
Joachim Denich | 1560-1633 | law Sciences | professor | Counselor to Duke Maximilian I. | |
Kaspar Denich | 1591-1660 | law Sciences | professor | Opponent of the witch trials | |
Johannes Eck | 1486-1543 | Catholic theology | professor | ||
Leonhard von Eck | 1480-1550 | Protector of Sodalitas litteraria Angilostadensis | Bavarian Chancellor | ||
Oswald von Eck | Rector | Rector 1539 | |||
Michael Eiselin | 1558-1613 | Catholic theology | professor | Dean 1591; Jesuit | |
Martin Eisengrein | 1535-1578 | Catholic theology | professor | multiple rector and dean | |
Ulrich Ellenbog | 1435-1499 | medicine | professor | One of the first professors of medicine in Ingolstadt | |
Johannes Engel | 1463-1519 | mathematics
physics |
professor | ||
Johannes Fabri | 1504-1558 | Catholic theology | professor | Controversial theologian ; Dominican | |
Johann Georg Feßmaier | 1775-1828 | law Sciences | professor | Government official | |
Philipp Fischer | 1744-1800 | medicine | Professor and Dean | Personal physician to Elector Maximilian III. Josephs | |
Valentin Forster | 1530-1608 | law Sciences | Private lecturer | ||
Leonhart Fuchs | 1501-1566 | medicine | Lecturer | already a student in Ingolstadt; one of the fathers of botany (editor of herbal books) | |
Mathias Gabler | 1736-1805 | philosophy Physics |
professor | Jesuit; School reformer | |
Obertus Giphanius | 1534-1604 | law Sciences | professor | Moral and pastoral theologian | |
Nikolaus Thaddäus von Gönner | 1764-1827 | law Sciences | professor | one of the fathers of botany (editor of herbal books); already a student in Ingolstadt; | |
Dominicus Gollowitz | 1761-1809 | theologian | professor | Professor of Theology, Benedictine | |
Georg Hauer | 1484-1536 | law Sciences | professor | multiple rector | |
Placidus Heinrich | 1758-1825 | physics | professor | meteorologist | |
Sebastian hot | 1571-1614 | Theology and philosophy | professor | Controversial | |
Carl Sebastian Heller from Hellersberg | 1772-1818 | law Sciences | associate professor | Constitutional lawyer | |
Hans-Georg Hermann | law Sciences | professor | Professor in Landshut | ||
Wiguläus Hundt | 1514-1588 | law Sciences | professor | Professor of Institutional Law; Rector 1539; Bavarian Council; Historian | |
Albert Hunger | 1545-1604 | philosophy | professor | also a theologian | |
Wolfgang Hunger | 1511-1555 | law Sciences | professor | also rector; Assessor at the Reich Chamber of Commerce | |
Philipp Jakob Huth from Dessendorf | 1742-1813 | University librarian | Catholic theologian; Student in Ingolstadt | ||
Johann Adam of Ickstatt | 1702-1776 | law Sciences | professor | ||
Joanni Ivitio from Iviczna |
1580-1598 | law Sciences | professor | Professor of Canon Law; died on December 3, 1598 | |
Count Friedrich von Kastel | Rector | Rector 1537 | |||
Anton Jonas Kilianstein | 1560-1638 | anatomy surgery |
professor | Rector 1623–1636 (eight times) | |
Karl Klocker | 1748-1805 | law Sciences | professor | Canonist | |
Gabriel Knogler | 1759-1838 | mathematics physics |
professor | Rector | |
Ignatius Koegler | 1680-1746 | mathematics | professor | also taught ancient languages and Hebrew | |
Johann Nepomuk Gottfried von Krenner | 1759-1812 | History and law | professor | Statesman | |
Caspar Lagus | 1526 / 33-1606 | law Sciences | professor | Opponents of the burning of witches | |
Johann Georg von Lori | 1723-1787 | law Sciences | professor | Professor of Criminal Law and Legal History; Historian; senior Bavarian civil servant; | |
Johannes Ludovici | † 1480 | theology | professor | Auxiliary Bishop in Regensburg, ducal Bavarian council and first professor of theology | |
Joseph Mangold | 1716-1787 | theology | professor | from 1747 professor of philosophy, from 1756 of theology | |
Maximus Mangold | 1722-1797 | theology | professor | from 1757 professor of philosophy, from 1763 of theology | |
Kaspar Manz | 1606-1677 | Jurisprudence | professor | 1636 to 1653, again from 1660 professor of law, seven times rector | |
Leonhard Marstaller | 1488-1546 | Catholic theology | professor | Reformation theologian; Canon of Eichstätt | |
Friedrich Martini | † 1630 | Jurisprudence | professor | At first he was a professor of logic against the resistance of the Jesuits | |
Johann Nepomuk Mederer | 1734-1808 | History, church history | professor | University chronicle writer, Jesuit | |
Christoph Mendel von Steinfels | † 1508 | law Sciences | professor | first rector of the university; Bishop of Chiemsee | |
Philipp Menzel | 1546-1613 | medicine
poetics |
professor | first Poeta laureatus of the university | |
Albert Menzel | † 1632 | medicine | professor | Personal physician to Duke Wolfgang Wilhelm von Pfalz-Neuburg ; botanist | |
Joseph Milbiller | 1753-1816 | history | professor | Representative of the Catholic Enlightenment | |
Petrus Niger | 1434-1483 | Catholic theology | professor | Author of the earliest printed anti-Semitic writings | |
Martin Prenninger | 1450-1501 | Artist faculty | professor | Humanist and legal scholar | |
Johannes Ramelspach | law Sciences | professor | |||
Johann Christoph Raßler | 1654-1723 | Catholic theology philosophy |
professor | Professor of moral theology; Jesuit; Studies Prefect | |
Johannes Reuchlin | 1455-1522 | Hebrew Studies | professor | Philosopher , humanist , lawyer and diplomat | |
Johann Michael Sailer | 1751-1832 | Catholic theology | professor | Bishop of Regensburg | |
Caspar Schatzger | 1463 / 64-1527 | Catholic theology | Editor | later Franciscan observant, well-known controversial theologian of the Reformation period; Student in Ingolstadt | |
Christoph Scheiner | 1573-1650 | physics Hebrew Studies |
professor | Discoverer of sunspots ; Jesuit | |
Johann Peter Schiltenberger | 1684-1759 | Jurisprudence | professor | multiple rector | |
Franz Schmalzgrueber | 1663-1735 | Canon Law | professor | Wrote a standard work on canon law; Jesuit | |
Benedict Schmidt | 1726-1778 | law Sciences | professor | Rector | |
Caspar Schober | 1504-1532 | law Sciences | professor | Judge at the Reich Chamber of Commerce | |
Hermann Scholliner | 1722-1795 | Catholic theology | professor | Professor of Dogmatics; Rector | |
Franz de Paula from cabinet | 1784-1800 | Philosophy / Cameral Sciences | professor | Professor of Natural History, Director of the Camera Institute | |
Franz Joseph Seedorf | 1691-1758 | Catholic theology | professor | Jesuit; Confessor and advisor to two Palatinate electors | |
Sebastian Seemiller | 1752-1798 | Catholic theology |
professor | multiple dean; Rector; Senior Librarian of the University Library | |
Johannes Stabius | 1468-1522 | mathematics | professor | Professor 1498-1503 | |
Friedrich Staphylus | 1512-1564 | Catholic theology History |
professor | previously a Lutheran theologian | |
Benedikt Stattler | 1728-1797 | Catholic theology | professor | Pro Chancellor ; Teacher Sailers | |
Celestine II. Step-back chair | 1738-1819 | physics mathematics |
professor | last prince abbot of St. Emmeram in Regensburg | |
Georg Stengel | 1584-1651 | philosophy theology |
professor | writer | |
Adam Tanner | 1572-1632 | Catholic theology |
professor | Counter reformer ; Witch theorists; Jesuit | |
Marcus Tatius | 1509-1562 | poetics | professor | Poeta laureatus 1541; Assessor at the Reich Chamber of Commerce | |
Georg Theander | 1508-1570 | Catholic theology | professor | ||
Johannes Tolhopf (Johannes Tolophus) | 1429-1503 | philosophy Catholic theology |
professor | Professor 1472, Rector 1473 and from 1479 royal councilor and court astrologer to King Matthias Corvinus | |
Sixtus Tucher | 1459-1507 | law Sciences | professor | 1488 rector | |
Gregory of Valencia | 1549-1603 | Catholic theology | professor | Confessor of Maximilian I. | |
Joseph Vogler | 1661-1708 | philosophy theology |
professor | Jesuit | |
Joseph von Weber | 1753-1831 | physics chemistry |
professor | ||
Adam Weishaupt | 1748-1830 | law Sciences | professor | Founder of the Illuminati | |
Johann Georg Weishaupt | 1716-1753 | law Sciences | professor | Professor of Institutions, Criminal Law and General Legal History | |
Georg von Widmont | 1640-1706 | law Sciences | professor | From 1676 professor for institutional theory , Pandect science , procedural and feudal law | |
Nikolaus Wynmann | 1510-1550 | Hebrew Studies | professor | Swiss humanist | |
Georg Zingel | 1428-1508 | Catholic theology | professor | dean | |
Viglius Zuichemus | 1507-1577 | law Sciences | professor | Dutch statesman; Ambassador of Emperor Charles V | |
Joseph Zwinger | 1705-1772 | Catholic theology | professor | Jesuit |
Well-known students
image | Surname | Life dates | Faculty / subject | Study time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Franz von Baader | 1765-1841 | medicine | Doctor, mining engineer and philosopher | ||
Carl Anton von Barth | 1758-1797 | law Sciences | Mayor of Munich and landscape chancellor | ||
Maximilian I of Bavaria | 1573-1651 | law Sciences | 1587-1591 | Duke of Bavaria (1597–1651) Elector from 1623 |
|
Maximilian Franz Joseph von Berchem | 1702-1778 | Camera science | Bavarian Minister of Foreign Affairs 1745–1777 | ||
Tilmann Bredenbach | 1526-1587 | Catholic theology | around 1565 | Catholic theologian and clergyman, canon in Cologne | |
Placidus Bridler | 1613-1679 | Canon Law | 1639-1640 | Benedictine priest, theologian and canon lawyer | |
Wilhelm Eisengrein | 1543-1584 | law Sciences | Theologian; Jurist; historian | ||
Johann Georg Feßmaier | 1775-1828 | law Sciences | 1794-1797 | Professor and Government Official | |
Christoph Gewold | 1556-1621 | Jurisprudence | from 1581 | Historian and lawyer | |
Ferdinand II of Habsburg | 1578-1637 | Catholic theology | 1590-1595 | Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire (1619-1637) | |
Johann Sebastian von Hirnheim | 1495-1555 | law Sciences | 1508 – before 1514 | Assessor (judge) at the Reich Chamber of Commerce in Speyer | |
Philipp Jakob Huth from Dessendorf | 1742-1813 | Catholic theology law Sciences |
Theologian; University librarian in Ingolstadt | ||
Matthias Gretz | 1480-1543 | Catholic theology | 1516 | Theologian; Philosopher; poet | |
Georg Hauer | 1440 – after 1491 | Catholic theology | 1472–1477 (?) | Monk ( Niederaltaich Abbey ), chronicler | |
Carl Sebastian Heller from Hellersberg | 1772-1818 | Law and Philosophy | 1788-1793 | Constitutional lawyer and university professor | |
Jakob Henrichmann | around 1482–1561 | law Sciences | after 1506 / before 1514 | Humanist, lawyer and clergyman | |
Philip Wilhelm von Hornick | 1640-1714 | law Sciences | 1660/61 | Mercantilist | |
Franz Xaver von Haeberl | 1759-1846 | Medicine and philosophy | 1781 / 82-1784 | doctor | |
Simon von Haeberl | 1772-1831 | medicine | Doctor , reformer of the Bavarian health system | ||
Sebastian hot | 1571-1614 | Theology and philosophy | until 1600 | Controversial | |
Melchior Khlesl | 1552-1630 | Catholic theology | 1579 | Bishop of Vienna and Chancellor of Emperor Matthias | |
Anton Maria Kobolt | 1752-1826 | philosophy Catholic theology |
1773-1777 | Canon and member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences | |
Wiguläus von Kreittmayr | 1705-1790 | law Sciences | Bavarian statesman; Creator of the Codex Maximilianeus Bavaricus Civilis and the Codex Maximilianeus Bavaricus Criminalis | ||
Franz von Krenner | 1762-1819 | law Sciences | from 1779 | Statesman | |
Johann Nepomuk Gottfried von Krenner | 1759-1812 | law Sciences | 1776-1779 | Statesman and professor of the university | |
Matthäus Lang von Wellenburg | 1468-1540 | law Sciences | 1486 (Baccalaureus) | Archbishop of Salzburg (1519–1549); Cardinal (from 1535) | |
Anton Johann Lipowsky | 1723-1780 | law Sciences | around 1746 (licentiate) | Lawyer and historian, founding member of the Churbairische Academy of Sciences | |
Squidward Ferdinand Lipowsky | 1738-1767 | law Sciences | around 1760 | Civil servant and musician | |
Johann von Mandl | 1588-1666 | law Sciences | 1604-1607 | Statesman | |
Joseph Mangold | 1716-1787 | theology | before 1747 | Jesuit | |
Maximus Mangold | 1722-1797 | theology | before 1753 | Jesuit | |
Kaspar Manz | 1606-1677 | Jurisprudence | before 1625 | Legal scholar, Chancellor of Pfalz-Neuburg | |
Friedrich Martini | † 1630 | from 1565 | Canon lawyer | ||
Johann Nepomuk Mederer | 1734-1808 | Catholic theology Church history |
1760-1763 | University chronicle writer, Jesuit | |
Franz Anton Mesmer | 1734-1815 | Catholic theology Philosophy |
1754 – before 1759 | Doctor; Founder of Animal Magnetism (Mesmerism) | |
Andreas Osiander | 1498-1552 | Catholic theology | 1515 – before 1522 | reformer | |
Sebastian Pollinger | † 1590 | Catholic theology | 1573-1579 | Auxiliary Bishop in Würzburg | |
Philipp von Rodenstein | 1564-1604 | Catholic theology | 1582-1584 | Prince-Bishop of Worms (1595–1604) | |
Christoph Leopold von Schaffgotsch | 1623-1703 | law Sciences | 1640s | Statesman | |
Caspar Schatzger | 1463 / 64-1527 | Catholic theology | 1489-1497 | Controversial theologian of the Reformation period | |
Franz Schmalzgrueber | 1663-1735 | Canon Law | before 1689 | Wrote a standard work on canon law; Jesuit | |
Arsacius Seehofer | around 1505 – around 1540 | theology | 1518-1522 | reformatory theologian | |
Wilhelm I. Solner | 1671-1741 | Catholic theology | around 1690 | Abbot of the Cistercian monastery in Ebrach | |
Daniel Stadler | 1705-1764 | philosophy Mathematics |
1725-1727 1731-1735 |
Jesuit , historian and confessor of Elector Maximilian III. Joseph of Bavaria | |
Georg von Stengel | 1775-1824 | law Sciences | 1796 | Bergrat and ministerial official of the Bavarian government | |
Johannes Stöffler | 1452-1531 | Catholic theology | 1472-1476 | Mathematician; Astronomer; Professor and Rector in Tübingen | |
Thomas Truchseß von Wetzhausen | 1460-1523 | Catholic theology | 1484/1485 | Theologian, humanist and vicar general in the Principality of Speyer | |
Edmund Zoz | 1653-1706 | Catholic theology | 1668 | Cistercian abbot |
Continue to work
The 1819 published novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley tells the story of young Victor Frankenstein, who creates an artificial man at the then famous University of Ingolstadt.
In 1989 Ingolstadt became a university town again when the Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt founded an economics faculty . Today this faculty is also known as WFI - Ingolstadt School of Management .
literature
Primary literature
- Valentin Rotmar, Johannes Engerd, Johann Nepomuk Mederer (arr.): Annales Ingolstadiensis Academiae , Part I From Anno 1472. ad Annum 1572 .; Part II From Anno 1572. ad Annum 1672 .; Part III From Anno 1672. ad Annum 1772. Johann Wilhelm Krüll, formerly Johann Ferdinand Luzenberger, Ingolstadt 1782 ( Google Books ), ( Google Books ) and ( Google Books ) (publication of the matriculation in a selection, noble students and patrician sons complete )
- Franz Xaver Freninger : The register book of the University of Ingolstadt – Landshut – Munich: Rectors, professors, doctors 1472–1872; Candidates 1772-1872 . Friedberg (Bavaria) 1872. (digitized version)
- Götz Freiherr von Pöllnitz: The register of the Ludwig Maximilians University, Ingolstadt-Landshut-Munich. Munich 1937–1984 (5 volumes).
- Lieselotte Resch, Ladislaus Buzás: Directory of doctors and dissertations from the University of Ingolstadt – Landshut – Munich 1472–1970. Faculty of Theology, Law and Economics. Ludwig Maximilians University, Munich 1975 (digitized version) .
Secondary literature
- Laetitia Boehm , Johannes Spörl : The Ludwig Maximilians University in its faculties. Volume 1. Berlin 1972, ISBN 3-428-02702-7 .
- Laetitia Boehm, Johannes Spörl (ed.): Ludwig Maximilians University Ingolstadt-Landshut-Munich (1472–1972). Berlin 1972.
- Petronella Loew: The History of Studentism at the University of Ingolstadt in the Age of Humanism and the Reformation (1472-1550). Philosophical dissertation Munich 1941.
- Karl Prantl: Ludwig Maximilians University. Ingolstadt, Landshut, Munich. 1472-1972. Munich 1972, ISBN 3-428-02700-0 . (Festschrift for the 500th anniversary)
- Heinz Jürgen Real: The private scholarship foundations of the University of Ingolstadt in the first century of their existence (= research and sources. Volume 4). Duncker & Humblot , Berlin 1972, ISBN 3-428-02638-1 .
- Albrecht Liess: The artistic faculty of the University of Ingolstadt 1472–1588. In: Laetitia Boehm, Johannes Spörl (Ed.): The Ludwig Maximilians University in its faculties. Volume 2. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1980, ISBN 3-428-04737-0 , pp. 9-35.
- Leonore Liess: History of the medical faculty in Ingolstadt from 1472 to 1600 (= series of publications of the Munich Association for the History of Medicine, Volume 14). Demeter Verlag, Graefelfing 1984.
- Helmut Wolff: History of the Ingolstadt Faculty of Law 1472–1625 (= Ludovico Maximilianea University of Ingolstadt-Landshut-Munich. Research. Volume 5). Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1973, ISBN 3-428-02941-0 .
- Christoph Schöner: Mathematics and astronomy at the University of Ingolstadt in the 15th and 16th centuries (= Ludovico Maximilianea. Research. Volume 13). Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1994. (At the same time dissertation Ludwig Maximilians University 1993).
- Gerhard Wilczek: Eras of the University of Ingolstadt. Wilczek, Ingolstadt 1998.
Web links
- Ludovico-Maximilianea platform: documents of central importance to the history of the university
- Internet presence of the historical association Ingolstadt
- Website about the Ludwig Maximilians University in Landshut
Individual evidence
- ^ Johannes Laschinger: Mair, Martin. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 15, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1987, ISBN 3-428-00196-6 , p. 713 ( digitized version ).
- ^ Georg Schweiger: The Theological Faculty of the University of Ingolstadt (1472-1800). In: Laetitia Boehm, Johannes Spörl: The Ludwig Maximilians University in its faculties. Volume 1. Berlin 1972, ISBN 3-428-02702-7 , p. 13.
- ^ Text of the bull of April 7, 1459 in Valentin Rotmar, Johann Engerd, Johann Nepomuk Mederer : Annales Ingolstadiensis Academiae . Volume 1. Ingolstadt 1782, p. XIX ( Textarchiv - Internet Archive )
- ↑ More on this Georg Schweiger: The Theological Faculty of the University of Ingolstadt (1472–1800) . In Laetitia Boehm , Johannes Spörl: The Ludwig Maximilians University in its faculties. Volume 1. Berlin 1972, ISBN 3-428-02702-7 .