Waldemar Schlögl

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Waldemar Hans Josef Schlögl (born November 4, 1927 in Berg ob Landshut , † July 19, 1980 in Landshut ) was a German historian and diplomat .

He was born as the third son of the economist Alois Schlögl and his wife. One of his brothers was Hermann A. Schlögl . He attended elementary school in Tittling and Munich. In 1938 he moved to the Maximiliansgymnasium in Munich . School time was interrupted by the war. He did military service as an air force helper and flak gunner. He left the Maximiliansgymnasium in Munich with the school leaving certificate. For a short time he studied physics and mathematics at the Technical University of Munich . He then studied philosophy and history at the Philosophical Faculty of the Berchmanskolleg in Pullach , which he graduated with a licentiate in 1953 . Until 1955 he taught German and history at the humanistic grammar school in St. Blasien . From 1956 he studied history auxiliary sciences at the University of Munich . Schlögl was an academic student of Peter Acht . He received his doctorate in 1961 with the thesis "The traditions and the oldest arable records of the Dießen am Ammersee monastery ". Schlögl completed his habilitation in Munich in the 1974/75 winter semester. On April 1, 1978, he was appointed Scientific Counselor and Professor at the Bamberg University of Applied Sciences. From the 1980 summer semester, he succeeded Peter Acht as holder of the chair for auxiliary historical sciences at the University of Munich. He died unexpectedly in July 1980 at a conference in Landshut. He was buried in the Munich forest cemetery.

Schlögl's work made the most important sources of the Dießen monastery accessible up to 1362/63. Ludwig Baumann had previously presented the monastery books of the dead in a critical edition in 1888. Schlögl edited 93 traditional and consecration notes from 1114 to 1345 and 193 seal certificates from 1114/23 to 1362. Of these, 106 were previously unprinted. In his habilitation, he dealt with the personal participation of the rulers in their documentary dispositions. He examined 62 documents with 64 signatures with the help of a cross from Charlemagne to Konradin . As a result, he found that 24 and thus a third of the material as handwritten ( autograph ), 21 "probably handwritten", 5 "possibly handwritten" and 12 as not handwritten ( allograph ). In a study published in 1977, Schlögl examined the early years of Ludwig of Bavaria . According to his source analysis, Ludwig was born in 1282. Much of the research followed his arguments.

Fonts

Editions

  • The oldest list of possessions and the Urbar of the Diessen Monastery from 1362-1363 and the registers for traditions, documents and Urbar (= sources and discussions on Bavarian history. New series, 22.2). Beck, Munich 1970.
  • The traditions and documents of the Diessen Abbey 1114–1362 (= sources and discussions on Bavarian history. New series, 22.1). Beck, Munich 1967.

Monographs

  • The signing of German kings from the Carolingian era to the Interregnum with a cross and signature. Contributions to the history and the technique of subordination in the Middle Ages (= Munich historical studies. Department of auxiliary historical sciences. Volume 16). Lassleben, Kallmünz 1978, ISBN 3-7847-4416-8 .

Editorships

  • with Peter Herde : Basic Sciences and History. Festschrift for Peter Acht. (= Munich historical studies. Department of Historical Auxiliary Sciences. Volume 15). Lassleben, Kallmünz 1976, ISBN 3-7847-4415-X .

literature

  • Schlögl, Waldemar. In: Kürschner's German Scholars Calendar. Bio-bibliographical directory of contemporary German-speaking scientists. Volume 3; S - Z. 13th edition. De Gruyter, Berlin et al. 1980, ISBN 3-11-007434-6 , p. 3401.
  • Waldemar Schlögl: The traditions and documents of the Diessen monastery 1114-1362 (= sources and discussions on Bavarian history. New series, 22.1). Beck, Munich 1967, p. 378 (curriculum vitae).

Web links

Remarks

  1. See the discussion by Alfred Gawlik in: Deutsches Archiv für Erforschung des Mittelalters 26, 1970, p. 578 f. ( online ); Walter Jaroschka in: Archivalische Zeitschrift 67, 1971, p. 222.
  2. See the reviews of Herwig Wolfram in: Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte. German Department 96, 1979, pp. 283–283; Ferdinand Opll in: Mitteilungen des Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung 87 (1979), p. 251; Alfred Gawlik in: German Archive for Research into the Middle Ages 36, 1980, pp. 622–623 ( online ); Rudolf Schieffer in: Mittellateinisches Jahrbuch 16, 1981, pp. 362–363.
  3. Waldemar Schlögl: The signature of German kings from the Carolingian era to the Interregnum with a cross and signature. Contributions to the history and technology of subordination in the Middle Ages. Kallmünz 1978, pp. 51–53 with diagram 7.
  4. ^ Waldemar Schlögl: Contributions to the youth history of Ludwigs of Bavaria. In: German Archive for Research into the Middle Ages 33, 1977, pp. 182–199 ( online ).
  5. Martin Clauss : Ludwig IV. And Friedrich the beautiful. Vienna - Mühldorf - Munich. In: Matthias Becher, Harald Wolter-von dem Knesebeck (Hrsg.): The King's rise of Frederick the Beautiful in 1314: Coronation, War and Compromise. Cologne 2017, pp. 255–270, here: p. 256 f.