Barthold Georg Niebuhr, by Wikipedia

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Barthold Georg Niebuhr, by Wikipedia

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Barthold Georg Niebuhr
by Wikipedia
Accessed: 6/3/18

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Barthold Georg Niebuhr

Barthold Georg Niebuhr (27 August 1776 – 2 January 1831) was a Danish-German statesman, banker, and historian who became Germany's leading historian of Ancient Rome and a founding father of modern scholarly historiography. Classical Rome (rather than Greece) caught the admiration of German thinkers. By 1810 Niebuhr was inspiring German patriotism in students at the University of Berlin by his analysis of Roman economy and government. Niebuhr was a leader of the Romantic Era and symbol of German national spirit that emerged after the defeat at Jena. But he was also deeply rooted in the classical spirit of the Age of Enlightenment in his intellectual presuppositions, his use of philologic analysis, and his emphasis on both general and particular phenomena in history.[1]

Education

Niebuhr was born in Copenhagen, the son of Carsten Niebuhr, a prominent German geographer resident in that city. His father provided his early education.[2] By 1794 the precocious young Niebuhr had already become an accomplished classical scholar who read several languages. That year he entered the University of Kiel, where he studied law and philosophy.[3] There he formed an important friendship with Madame Hensler, the widowed daughter-in-law of one of the professors, six years older than himself. He also made the acquaintance of her sister, Amelie Behrens, whom he subsequently married.[4] In 1796 he left Kiel to become private secretary to the Danish finance minister, Count Schimmelmann, but in 1798 he gave up this appointment and traveled in Great Britain, spending a year at Edinburgh studying agriculture and physics.[5] Of his stay in Great Britain, he said "my early residence in England gave me one important key to Roman history. It is necessary to know civil life by personal observation in order to understand such states as those of antiquity. I never could have understood a number of things in the history of Rome without having observed England."[4]

In 1799 he returned to Denmark, where he entered the state service; in 1800 he married Amalie Behrens (1773-1815) and settled at Copenhagen. In 1804 he became chief director of the national bank.[5] After the death of his first wife, Niebuhr married (1816) Margarete Henslen (1787-1831), with whom he had one son, Marcus, and three daughters, Amalie, Lucia and Cornelia.

To Prussia

In September 1806, he quit the Denmark post for a similar appointment in Prussia. He showed much business ability in his banking work, which he attributed to his life in England and Scotland.[2] He arrived in Prussia on the eve of the catastrophe of Jena. He accompanied the fugitive government to Königsberg, where he rendered considerable service in the commissariat, and was afterwards still more useful as commissioner of the national debt and by his opposition to ill-considered schemes of taxation. He was also for a short time Prussian minister in the Netherlands, where he endeavoured without success to fund a loan. The extreme sensitiveness of his temperament, however, disqualified him for politics; he proved impracticable in his relations with Hardenberg and other ministers, and in 1810 retired for a time from public life, accepting the more congenial appointment of royal historiographer and professor at the university of Berlin.[5]

Academic and diplomatic career

He commenced his lectures with a course on the history of Rome, which formed the basis of his great work Römische Geschichte. The first two volumes, based upon his lectures, were published in 1812, but attracted little attention at the time owing to the absorbing interest of political events. In 1813 Niebuhr's own attention was diverted from history by the uprising of the German people against Napoleon; he entered the Landwehr and ineffectually sought admission into the regular army. He edited for a short time a patriotic journal, the Prussian Correspondent, joined the headquarters of the allied sovereigns, and witnessed the battle of Bautzen, and was subsequently employed in some minor negotiations. In 1815 he lost both his father and his wife.[5]

He next accepted (1816) the post of ambassador at Rome. Before his departure for Rome, he married his wife's niece.[4] On his way to Rome, he discovered in the cathedral library of Verona the long-lost Institutes of Gaius, afterwards edited by Savigny, to whom he communicated the discovery under the impression that he had found a portion of Ulpian. During his residence in Rome Niebuhr discovered and published fragments of Cicero and Livy, aided Cardinal Mai in his edition of Cicero's De re publica, and shared in framing the plan of the great work Beschreibung Roms (“The Description of the City of Rome”) on the topography of ancient Rome by Christian Charles Josias Bunsen and Ernst Zacharias Platner (1773–1855), to which he contributed several chapters. He also, on a journey home from Italy, deciphered in a palimpsest at the Abbey of St. Gall the fragments of Flavius Merobaudes, a Roman poet of the 5th century.[5] As minister, he brought about the understanding between Prussia and the Pope signalized by the bull De salute animarum in 1821.[2] Niebuhr was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1822.[6]

In 1823 he resigned the position in Rome and established himself at Bonn, where the remainder of his life was spent, with the exception of some visits to Berlin as councillor of state. He here rewrote and republished (1827–1828) the first two volumes of his Roman History, and composed a third volume, bringing the narrative down to the end of the First Punic War, which, with the help of a fragment written in 1831, was edited after his death (1832) by Johannes Classen. He also assisted in August Bekker's edition of the Byzantine historians (the Corpus Scriptorum Historiae Byzantinae), and delivered courses of lectures on ancient history, ethnography, geography, and on the French Revolution.[5]

In February 1830, his house was burned down, but the greater part of his books and manuscripts were saved. France's revolution of July in the same year was a terrible blow to him, and filled him with the most dismal anticipations of the future of Europe.[5] Niebuhr died, aged 54, in Bonn.

Evaluation and opinion

Niebuhr's Roman History counts among epoch-making histories both as marking an era in the study of its special subject and for its momentous influence on the general conception of history. Leonhard Schmitz said:

The main results arrived at by the inquiries of Niebuhr, such as his views of the ancient population of Rome, the origin of the plebs, the relation between the patricians and plebeians, the real nature of the ager publicus, and many other points of interest, have been acknowledged by all his successors.


Other alleged discoveries, such as the construction of early Roman history out of still earlier ballads, have not been equally fortunate; but if every positive conclusion of Niebuhr's had been refuted, his claim to be considered the first who dealt with the ancient history of Rome in a scientific spirit would remain unimpaired, and the new principles introduced by him into historical research would lose nothing of their importance. He suggested, though he did not elaborate, the theory of the myth, so potent an instrument for good and ill in modern historical criticism. He brought in inference to supply the place of discredited tradition, and showed the possibility of writing history in the absence of original records. By his theory of the disputes between the patricians and plebeians arising from original differences of race he drew attention to the immense importance of ethnological distinctions, and contributed to the revival of these divergences as factors in modern history. More than all, perhaps, since his conception of ancient Roman story made laws and manners of more account than shadowy lawgivers, he undesignedly influenced history by popularizing that conception of it which lays stress on institutions, tendencies and social traits to the neglect of individuals.[5]

According to Richard Garnett in the 9th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica:

Niebuhr's personal character was in most respects exceedingly attractive. His heart was kind and his affections were strong; he was magnanimous and disinterested, simple and honest. He had a kindling sympathy with everything lofty and generous, and framed his own conduct upon the highest principles. His chief defect was an over-sensitiveness, leading to peevish and unreasonable behaviour in his private and official relations, to hasty and unbalanced judgments of persons and things that had given him annoyance, and to a despondency and discouragement which frustrated the great good he might have effected as a critic of public affairs from the point of view of a lofty morality. His imagination sometimes usurps the functions of his judgment, and his sagacity is traversed by a vein of paradox. In this, as in many other features of his intellectual character, he strikingly resembles Bentley, but his moral constitution is totally dissimilar.[4]


Works

The first edition of Niebuhr's Roman History was translated into English by F. A. Walter (1827), but was immediately superseded by the translation of the second edition by Julius Hare and Connop Thirlwall, completed by William Smith and Leonhard Schmitz (last edition, 1847–1851).[7] He wrote Griechische Heroengeschichte (“History of Greek heroes,” 1842; 11th ed. 1896), for his son Marcus; Geschichte des Zeitalters der Revolution (“History of the age of revolutions,” 1845); Kleine historische und philologische Schriften (“Minor historical and philological writings,” 1828-43). His Lectures on Ancient History is familiar in English translation.[3]

Notes

1. Peter Hanns Reill, "Barthold Georg Niebuhr and the Enlightenment Tradition." German Studies Review (1980): 9-26. in JSTOR
2. Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Niebuhr, Barthold Georg". Encyclopedia Americana.
3. Gilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). "Niebuhr, Barthold Georg". New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.
4. Garnett, Richard (1884). "Niebuhr, Barthold Georg". In Baynes, T.S.; Smith, W.R. Encyclopædia Britannica. 17 (9th ed.). New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
5. Chisholm 1911, p. 668.
6. "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter N" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 8 September 2016.
7. Chisholm 1911, p. 669.

References

• This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Niebuhr, Barthold Georg". Encyclopædia Britannica. 19 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 668–669. This work in turn cites:
• Lebensnachrichten über B. G. Niebuhr, aus Briefen desselben und aus Erinnerungen einiger seiner nächsten Freunde, by Dorothea Hensler (3 vols., 1838-1839).
• John Edwin Sandys, History of Classical Scholarship (1908), iii., pp. 78–82.
• Bunsen, Christian Charles Josias. The life and letters of Barthold George Niebuhr (1852) online edition
• Sir George Cornewall Lewis, Essay on the Credibility of the Early Roman history.
• Reill, Peter Hanns. "Barthold Georg Niebuhr and the Enlightenment Tradition," German Studies Review, (1980) 3#1, pp 9–26 in JSTOR

Further reading

• Renate Bridenthal, "Was There a Roman Homer? Niebuhr's Thesis and Its Critics", History and Theory, 11 (1972), pp. 193–213

External links

• Barthold Georg Niebuhr's Works Hathi Trust
• Works of Barthold Georg Niebuhr Internet Archive
• Edgar Allan Poe, Review of Lieber's Reminiscences of Niebuhr, from Southern Literary Messenger, January 1836.
• Lectures on the History of Rome from the Earliest Times to the Fall of the Western Empire (2nd English edition, 1848) Volume One Volume Two Volume Three
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