Martin Hertz

Martin Julius Hertz (7 April 1818, in Hamburg 22 September 1895) was a German classical philologist.

He studied philology at the Universities of Bonn and Berlin, where his instructors included August Boeckh (1785–1867) and Karl Lachmann (1793–1851), the latter being an important influence to Hertz' career. He earned his doctorate in 1842, followed by his habilitation a few years later (1845). Afterwards, he embarked on an educational journey throughout Europe (southern Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, France, Italy and Austria).

In 1855 he became a professor of classical philology at the University of Greifswald, followed by a professorship at the University of Breslau several years later (1862).

He devoted his career to studies of Roman literature, antiquities and authors, being especially known for his scholarly examination of the grammarian Priscian and the writer Gellius.

Literary works

  • De L. Cinciis commentationis particula, 1842
  • Sinnius Capito, 1844
  • Karl Lachmann: Eine Biographie, 1851 – Karl Lachmann, a biography.
  • A. Gellii Noctivm atticarvm libri XX, 1853
  • Libros I - XII continens, 1855 (Priscian).
  • Prisciani grammatici Caesariensis institutionem grammaticarum Libri XVIII, 1855-1859
  • Titi Livi Ab vrbe condita libri, 1857
  • Analecta ad carminum Horatianorum historiam, 1882
  • Opuscula Gelliana Lateinisch und Deutsch, 1886 – Opuscula of Gellius, Latin & German.
  • Admonitiuncula Horatiana, 1889.[1][2]

References

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