Vincenz Pall of Pallhausen

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Vincenz Pall von Pallhausen (born January 22, 1759 in Freising , † August 9, 1817 in Munich ) was a Bavarian civil servant, archivist and historian .

Pallhausen attended the school and the lyceum in Freising and entered the Benedictine monastery on Tegernsee as a novice in 1799 , which he soon left. He finished his training in Munich and was employed as a secret clerk in 1785, in 1792 as a secret registrar in the state registry and as a nobleman von Pallhausen raised to the nobility. In 1797 he took part in the Rastatt Congress as registrar of the Bavarian legation . After the end of 1799 he became a secret state archivist and, in recognition of his historical work, became a member of the Academy of Sciences .

In addition to some historical reading and school books, he wrote a pamphlet on "Garibald, first King Bojoariens", which involved him in a literary feud with Karl Heinrich von Lang , in which he represented the Old Bavarian autochthonians in the dispute between the Old Bavarians and the New Bavarian Swabians and Franks has been. His thesis of the Celtic origin of the Bavarians , which he defended tenaciously in his "Boioariae Topographia Romano-Celtica", was considered cranky early on, but could (arguing with the original relationship with the French, who are considered to be descendants of the Celts) for one historical justification of the Rhine Confederation can be instrumentalized.

Pallhausen was also an inventor, particularly in the field of printing technology and steam shipping .

Fonts

  • Treatise on the question of price: Were all of today's imperial estates in Bavaria also all Bavarian vassals? | When and through what causes did they come to the immediate imperial estate? (Munich 1803)
  • Monument in stereotypes dedicated to Gutenberg's man (Munich 1806)
  • Garibald, first king Bojoariens and his daughter Theodelinde, first queen in Italy, or the prehistory of the Bavarians (Munich 1811)
  • Addendum to the prehistory of the Bavarians . Munich 1815 ( e-copy ).
  • Boioariae Topographia Romano-Celtica, or Baiern as it was in the oldest times (Munich 1816)

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Alexander Demandt: The Celts. Munich 1998, p. 111