Franz Xaver von Wegele (29 October 1823, in Landsberg am Lech – 17 October 1897, in Würzburg) was a German historian, largely known for his studies on the history of Thuringia, Franconia and the University of Würzburg.

Education and career

He studied history at the universities of Munich and Heidelberg, where his influences were Friedrich Christoph Schlosser, Ludwig Häusser and Georg Gottfried Gervinus. In 1849 he obtained his habilitation at the University of Jena, and two years later became an associate professor of history. In 1857 he relocated to the University of Würzburg as a full professor. In 1863 he was named university rector.[1][2]

Selected works

  • Dante’s Leben und Werke : kulturgeschichtlich dargest., 1852 Dante's life and works. Cultural historical depiction.
  • Annales Reinhardsbrunnenses, (as editor) 1854 Annals of Reinhardsbrunn.
  • Arnold von Selenhofen, Erzbischof von Mainz (1153–1160), (1855) Arnold of Selenhofen, Archbishop of Mainz.
  • Zur Literatur und Kritik der Fränkischen Necrologien, 1864 Literature and critique of Franconian necrologies.
  • Friedrich der Freidige, Markgraf von Meißen, Landgraf von Thüringen, und die Wettiner seiner Zeit : 1247 - 1325, (1870) Friedrich the Brave, Margrave of Meissen, Landgrave of Thuringia, and the Wettiner of his time.
  • Kaiser Friedrich I., Barbarossa, 1871 Frederick Barbarossa.
  • Graf Otto von Hennenberg-Botenlauben und sein Geschlecht (1180–1250), (1875) Otto von Botenlauben and his lineage.
  • Göthe als Historiker, 1876 Goethe as an historian.
  • Geschichte der Universität Wirzburg (2 parts), 1882 History of the University of Würzburg.
  • Geschichte der deutschen Historiographie seit dem Auftreten des Humanismus, 1885 History of German historiography since the advent of Humanism.[3]

Wegele was the author of many articles in the Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie.[4]

References


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