Friedrich Schlosser

German historian
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Quick Facts
Born:
Nov. 17, 1776, Jever, Prussia
Died:
Sept. 23, 1861, Heidelberg, Baden (aged 84)
Subjects Of Study:
universal history

Friedrich Schlosser (born Nov. 17, 1776, Jever, Prussia—died Sept. 23, 1861, Heidelberg, Baden) was a historian and teacher whose universal histories stressing a moralistic and judgmental approach to the past were the most popular historical works in Germany before the rise of Leopold von Ranke and his demands for more scientific standards of scholarship.

Schlosser was the son of a lawyer and studied theology at the University of Göttingen (1794–97). After serving as a tutor and then vice rector at the college at Jever, he was named professor of history at the University of Frankfurt and became the librarian there in 1814. Three years later he began to teach history at the University of Heidelberg, where he remained until his death.

Schlosser’s principal work is the Weltgeschichte für das deutsche Volk, 18 vol. (1854–56; “World History for the German People”), now highly criticized for its didactic and moralistic tone but quite popular in his time. His Geschichte des 18. Jahrhunderts und des 19. bis zum Sturz des französischen Kaiser Reichs, 6 vol. (1836–48; “History of the 18th and 19th Centuries to the Downfall of the French Empire”) is a study dominated by the political ideals of 1789. An earlier work, an account of the iconoclastic emperors (1812), is among his best monographs and stands as one of the first studies in Byzantine history. Generally, however, modern scholars criticize Schlosser for his moralistic standards and also for his uncritical analysis.

Temple ruins of columns and statures at Karnak, Egypt (Egyptian architecture; Egyptian archaelogy; Egyptian history)
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