Johann Christian Felix Baehr
German classical philologist and librarian (1798–1872) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
German classical philologist and librarian (1798–1872) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Johann Christian Felix Baehr or Bähr (June 13, 1798 – November 29, 1872) was a German philologist.
Born at Darmstadt, he studied at the Gymnasium and the University of Heidelberg, where he was appointed professor of classical philology in 1823, chief librarian in 1832, and on the retirement of G. F. Creuzer, became director of the philological seminary. He died at Heidelberg.[1]
His earliest works were editions of Plutarch's Alcibiades (1822), Philopoemen, Flamininus, Pyrrhus (1826), the fragments of Ctesias (1824), and Herodotus (1830–1835, 1855–1862). But most important of all were his works on Roman literature and humanistic studies in the Middle Ages: Geschichte der römischen Litteratur ("History of Roman Literature", 1828; 4th edition, 1868–1870), and the supplementary volumes:
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