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Alexander Brückner

Baltic German historian (1834–1896) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alexander Brückner
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Alexander Brückner (5 August 1834, Saint Petersburg 15 November 1896, Jena) was a Baltic German historian who specialized in Russian studies. He was the father of geographer Eduard Brückner.

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Alexander Bruckner

He studied history and economics at the universities of Heidelberg, Jena and Berlin, receiving his doctorate in Heidelberg with a dissertation on the history of the Diet of Worms (1521). As a student, his instructors included Johann Gustav Droysen, Ludwig Häusser, Leopold von Ranke and Friedrich von Raumer. From 1861 to 1867 he served as a professor of history at the Imperial Law School in St. Petersburg, and afterwards was a professor of history at the University of Odessa (from 1867) and the Imperial University of Dorpat (1872–1891).[1][2]

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Selected works

Bruckner was fluent in both German and Russian, and authored works in both languages. The following are a list of some of his German writings:

  • Das Kupfergeld 1856-63 in Russland, 1863 Copper money in Russia, 1856–63.
  • Culturhistorische Studien, 1878 Cultural history studies.
  • Peter der Grosse, 1879 Peter the Great.
  • Katharina die Zweite, 1883 Catherine the Great.
  • Die Europäisierung Russlands Land und Volk, 1888 The Europeanization of Russia's country and people.
  • Geschichte Russlands bis zum Ende des 18 Jahrhunderts, (2 volumes, 1896–1913), with Constantin Mettig History of Russia until the end of the 18th century.[3]
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References

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