Johann Friedrich Böhmer
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Johann Friedrich Böhmer (born April 22, 1795, Frankfurt am Main [Germany]—died Oct. 22, 1863, Frankfurt am Main) was a historian known for his Regesta, an annotated collection of charters and imperial documents of medieval Germany.[1]
Biography
Böhmer was born in Frankfurt as the son of the Palatine official Karl Ludwig Böhmer. Educated at the universities of Heidelberg and Göttingen, he showed an interest in art and visited Italy; but returning to Frankfurt he turned his attention to the study of history, and became secretary of the Gesellschaft für ältere deutsche Geschichtskunde. He was also archivist and then librarian of the city of Frankfurt.<ref name=treccani>"Böhmer, Johann Friedrich", Treccani</ref>
Böhmer had a great dislike of Prussia and the Protestant faith, and a corresponding affection for Austria and the Roman Catholic Church, to which, however, he did not belong. His researches are of great value to students. He died unmarried.<ref name="EB1911">{{#if: |
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Johannes Janssen wrote a biography in three volumes in 1868 of Böhmer, a man whom he considered as his teacher and guide.<ref>Janssen, Johannes. Johann Friedrich Boehmers Leben, Briefe und kleinere Schriften, Freiburg, 1868</ref>
Historical work
Böhmer's historical work was chiefly concerned with collecting and tabulating charters and other imperial documents of the Middle Ages. First, an abstract appeared: the Regesta chronologico-diplomatica regum atque imperatorum Romanorum 911-1313 (Frankfurt, 1831), which was followed by the Regesta chronologico-diplomatica Karolorum. Die Urkunden sämtlicher Karolinger in kurzen Auszügen (Frankfurt, 1833), and a series of Regesta imperii.<ref name=treccani/> For the period 1314-1347 (Frankfurt, 1839), the Regesta was followed by three volumes, and for the period 1246-1313 (Frankfurt, 1844) by two supplementary volumes. The remaining period of the Regesta, as edited by Böhmer, covers 1198-1254 (Stuttgart, 1849). These collections contain introductions and explanatory passages by the author.<ref name="EB1911"/>
Equally valuable is the Fontes rerum Germanicarum (Stuttgart, 1843–1868), a collection of original sources for German history during the 13th and 14th centuries.<ref name=treccani/> The fourth and last volume of this work was edited by A. Huber after the author's death. Other collections edited by Böhmer are: Die Reichsgesetze 900-1400 (Frankfurt, 1832); Wittelsbachische Regesten von der Erwerbung des Herzogtums Bayern 1180 bis zu dessen erster Wiedervereinigung 1340 (Stuttgart, 1854); and Codex diplomaticus Moeno-Francofurtanus. Urkundenbuch der Reichsstadt Frankfurt (Frankfurt, 1836; new edition by F Law, 1901).<ref name="EB1911"/>
Other volumes and editions of the Regesta imperii, edited by Julius von Ficker, Engelbert Mühlbacher, Eduard Winkelmann and others, are largely based on Böhmer's work. Böhmer left a great amount of unpublished material, and after his death two other works were published from his papers: Acta imperii selecta, edited by J. Ficker (Innsbruck, 1870); and Regesta archiepiscoporum Maguntinensium, edited by C Will (Innsbruck, 1877–1886).<ref name="EB1911"/>
References
- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica
- 1795 births
- 1863 deaths
- 19th-century German historians
- German librarians
- Writers from Frankfurt
- Heidelberg University alumni
- University of Göttingen alumni
- Burials at Frankfurt Main Cemetery
- German male non-fiction writers
- Members of the Göttingen Academy of Sciences and Humanities