Theologe & Germanist Anton Birlinger (1834-1891): Pk Wildbad 1872 An C.Macklot

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Seller: tucholsklavier ✉️ (7,665) 100%, Location: Berlin, DE, Ships to: WORLDWIDE, Item: 305447614632 Theologe & Germanist Anton Birlinger (1834-1891): Pk Wildbad 1872 An C.Macklot.

Theologe & Germanist Anton Birlinger (1834-1891): Pk Wildbad 1872 An C.Macklot The description of this item has been automatically translated. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us.

You are bidding on one Handwritten, signed postcard of the catholic Theologians, Germanists and writers Anton Birlinger (1834-1891).

Dated Wildbad, “Zum Stern”, 10. October 1872.

Written on one "Correspondence card (traffic in the 1 kr. district) letter tax)" the royal Württemberg Post Office; as a 1-Kreuzer stationary with an additional 1-Kreuzer postage stamp.

The card is v included in the "Postcard Catalog". "all postcards published up to 1890" by A. Larisch, Munich 1890, p. 198. -- At that time the catalog value was 1.75 marks, a fairly high sum at the time.

The bottom edge with instructions on how to use the postcard is folded over (this should probably be removed before shipping, but that didn't happen here).

Aimed at Mr Macklot from the Badische Landeszeitung in Karlsruhe, the printer and publisher Camill Macklot the Elder (1809-1886) , editor of the Badische Landeszeitung.

Transcription: "With frdl. Greetings. I'm coming to K. z. tomorrow afternoon. Them; please for a few hours for me. Prof. Birlinger."

Format: 11x16.5cm.

Condition: Map slightly stained, the right edge of the text page with mounting traces, the lower edge with a mounted strip of paper. b Please also note the pictures!

Internal note: Kiefer 23-10 (7) folder Willlha autograph autograph

About Anton Birlinger (source: wikipedia) and the recipient (source: StadtWiki Karlsruhe):

Anton Birlinger (* 14. January 1834 in Wurmlingen near Rottenburg am Neckar; † 15. June 1891 in Bonn) was a German Catholic theologian and Germanist.

Life and work: Birlinger studied Catholic theology and German at the University of Tübingen from 1854 to 1858. He then went to the Rottenburg seminary and was ordained a priest there in 1859. In 1861 he went to Munich to continue his German studies with Alois Josef Vollmer (1803–1876). He immediately stood out through a collection of sayings and legends, but also through his own literary experiments, and finally as an editor of folklore works and dialect dictionaries. In addition, in Munich he came even more strongly under the influence of an enlightened theology based on science and with a willingness to contradict dogmas coming from Rome (Ignaz von Döllinger, Johann Nepomuk Huber, Johann Friedrich, Jakob Frohschammer and Joseph Anton Messmer).

Shortly after losing the war against Prussia, Birlinger went from Munich to the University of Breslau, to which anti-infallible theology professors had been appointed and which was considered a center of criticism of Roman Catholicism (anti-ultramontanism). Only Johann Anton Theiner (1799–1860) and the later Old Catholics Joseph Hubert Reinkens and Johann Baptist Baltzer should be mentioned here. The university and religious policy questions now posed differently: between radical German Catholic demands for democracy and religious freedom and the Sailerian theology of a prince-bishop full of mystical flowerbeds (Melchior von Diepenbrock), this professorial rebellion was about not to tolerate any curtailment of academic freedom.

Birlinger turned to the doyen of scientifically based proverb research, Karl Simrock at the University of Bonn. On his recommendation, he received his habilitation in Bonn in 1869 - and became an associate professor of German philology there in 1872.

Together with Simrock and Franz Peter Knoodt, he was committed to reforming the Catholic Church. He supported the Bonn theology professors Franz Heinrich Reusch and Joseph Langen, who split off from their faculty under the protection of the government, and participated as a priest in building up anti-Vatican resistance and an “Old Catholic” movement. In 1870 he was suspended from the Roman Catholic priesthood as a supporter of the Old Catholic movement. At 4. In June 1873 he stood alongside 29 competitors as a candidate for bishop before an electoral committee of 55 laypeople and 22 priests for the newly constituted Old Catholic Church. The Breslau colleague Joseph Hubert Reinkens was elected, who then also came to Bonn, the new episcopal see. However, after the further development of the church, Birlinger withdrew from priestly service in the Old Catholic Church, although not because of the cancellation of celibacy like Reusch and Langen. Birlinger's return to Rome on his deathbed, as reported by August Franzen, is probably only legendary.

Birlinger's work focused on language and symbol criticism and maintenance, folklore, and medical history (in 1882 he edited in the Alemannia what has since become known as the Alsatian Pharmacopoeia (Strasbourg, around 1400), a compilation of previously known recipes and contents from medical tracts, such as the pharmacopoeia of Ortolf von Baierland), local history, but also superstition research as a preliminary form of empirical theology.

The Birlingerweg in Berlin-Spandau commemorates him.

Fonts (selection)

Folklore from Swabia. 2 volumes. Freiburg, 1861–1862

Take me with you! Freiburg in Breisgau. Herder, Freiburg 1862

Dictionary on folklore from Swabia. Herder, Freiburg 1862

The Augsburg dialect. Greetings to the Germanists at the XXI. Meeting of German philologists in Augsburg. Rieger, Augsburg 1862

Swabian-Augsburg dictionary. Munich 1864

Swabian folk songs. Freiburg 1864

An Alemannic booklet of good food. In: Meeting report of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences in Munich 2, 1865, p. 171 ff.

The Alemannic language on the right of the Rhine since the 13th century Century. Berlin 1868

This is how the Swabians speak. Berlin 1868

From Swabia. Sayings, legends, superstitions, customs. 2 volumes. Wiesbaden 1872–1873

From an Alsace pharmacopoeia from the 14th century. century. In: Alemannia. Volume 10, 1882, pp. 219–232; also in: Gerhard Baader, Gundolf Keil: Medicine in the medieval West. Scientific Book Society, Darmstadt 1982 (= ways of research. Volume 363), pp. 45–59.

Alamannia on the right bank of the Rhine. Stuttgart 1890

Editorial:

Alemannia. Journal for the language, literature and folklore of Alsace. Bonn 1871 ff. (continued from 1892 by Fridrich Pfaff)

Camill Macklot Sr (* 1809; † 1886) was a printer and publisher in Karlsruhe.

Works : Camill Macklot was the son of the printer Philipp Macklot and took over the publishing house of Macklot'sche Buchhandlung.

Inaugurated into the Karlsruhe Freemason Lodge in 1853, he brought since 1. In June 1850 one of the Grand Duchy's most important press organs, the Badische Landes-Zeitung, was published. From 1849 to 1850, the predecessor newspaper Die Biene (Badische Landesblatt), of which he was the editor, appeared daily. From 1851 he printed a fiction entertainment paper as a supplement to the Badische Landes-Zeitung.

Prints

The Bee (Baden State Papers)

Baden state newspaper

Matthias Koch: Vienna and the Viennese. Historically developed and described in relation to the present, C. Macklot, Karlsruhe, 1842

Together with Simrock and Franz Peter Knoodt, he was committed to reforming the Catholic Church. He supported the Bonn theology professors Franz Heinrich Reusch and Joseph Langen, who split off from their faculty under the protection of the government, and participated as a priest in building up anti-Vatican resistance and an “Old Catholic” movement. In 1870 he was suspended from the Roman Catholic priesthood as a supporter of the Old Catholic movement. At 4. In June 1873 he stood alongside 29 competitors as a candidate for bishop before an electoral committee of 55 laypeople and 22 priests for the newly constituted Old Catholic Church. The Breslau colleague Joseph Hubert Reinkens was elected, who then also came to Bonn, the new episcopal see. However, after the further development of the Together with Simrock and Franz Peter Knoodt, he was committed to reforming the Catholic Church. He supported the Bonn theology professors Franz Heinrich Reusch and Joseph Langen, who split off from their faculty under the protection of the government, and participated as a priest in building up anti-Vatican resistance and an “Old Catholic” movement. In 1870 he was suspended from the Roman Catholic priesthood as a supporter of the Old Catholic movement. At 4. In June 1873 he stood alongside 29 competitors as a candidate for bishop before an electoral committee of 55 laypeople and 22 priests for the newly constituted Old Catholic Church. The Breslau colleague Joseph Hubert Reinkens was elected, who then also came to Bonn, the new episcopal see. However, after the further development of the
Autogrammart Schriftstück
Erscheinungsort Wildbad
Region Europa
Material Papier
Sprache Deutsch
Autor Anton Birlinger
Original/Faksimile Original
Genre Geschichte
Eigenschaften Erstausgabe
Eigenschaften Signiert
Erscheinungsjahr 1872
Produktart Handgeschriebenes Manuskript
  • Autograph Type: Document
  • Place of Publication: Wildbad
  • Region: Europe
  • Material: Paper
  • Language: German
  • Author: Anton Birlinger
  • Original/Facsimile: Original
  • Genre: History
  • Properties: First Edition, Signed
  • Date of Publication: 1872
  • Type: Handwritten Manuscript
  • Brand: Unbranded

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