Wolfgang Hagemann

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Wolfgang Hagemann (born April 9, 1911 in Leipzig , † June 11, 1978 in Rome ) was a German historian .

The son of an administrative lawyer passed his matriculation examination in Berlin-Dahlem in 1929 and then studied history, geography and German studies in Heidelberg and Berlin. In 1928 he became a member of the Corps Vandalia Heidelberg . He received his doctorate from Albert Brackmann with the work The Origin of Scaliger Signory in Verona (1259–1304) and finished his studies in 1936. In 1935, Paul Fridolin Kehr appointed him as a research assistant at the Roman Institute with the task of researching the archives of Umbria and to search the brands systematically for the Staufer period . His many archival trips resulted in numerous articles, especially in the sources and research from Italian archives and libraries . From February 1941 until the end of the war, Hagemann worked in North Africa and Italy as an interpreter for Erwin Rommel and other commanders, as well as in art protection. After the war he prepared the reopening of the German Historical Institute (DHI) in Rome. In 1949 Hagemann took over the edition of the register fragment of Kaiser Friedrich II. From 1239/40, but he could not finish the work until his death. Hagemann was deputy director of the DHI in Rome for many years.

Fonts

  • The origin of the Scaliger signory in Verona (1259–1304) (= historical studies 304, ZDB -ID 514152-7 ). Ebering, Berlin 1937.

literature

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Remarks

  1. Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 68 , 946