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Johann August Nauck
German classical philologist (1822–1892) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Johann August Nauck (18 September 1822 – 3 August 1892) was a German classical scholar and critic. His chief work was the Tragicorum Graecorum Fragmenta (TrGF).

Biography
Nauck was born at Auerstedt in present-day Thuringia. He studied at the University of Halle as a student of Gottfried Bernhardy and Moritz Hermann Eduard Meier. In 1853 he became an adjunct under August Meineke at the Joachimsthal Gymnasium in Berlin. After a brief stint as an educator at the Grauen Kloster (1858), he relocated to St. Petersburg, where in 1869, he was appointed professor of Greek at the historical-philological institute.[1]
Nauck was one of the most distinguished textual critics of his day,[2] although, like PH Peerlkamp, he was fond of altering a text in accordance with what he thought the author must, or ought to, have written.[3] Nauck was elected a foreign member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1885.[4]
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Published works
The most important of his writings and translations, all of which deal with Greek language and literature (especially the tragedians) are as follows:
- Fragments of Aristophanes of Byzantium (1848).
- Euripidis Tragoediae superstites et deperditarum fragmenta; ex recensione Augusti Nauckii, (1854).[5] (Euripides, tragedies and fragments)
- Tragicorum Graecorum Fragmenta (1856, last edition, 1983), His chief work — it was intended as a counterpart to Meineke's "comedy fragments", (Fragmenta comicorum graecorum ).[2]
- Revised edition of Schneidewin's annotated Sophocles (1856, etc.)
- Porphyrius of Tyre (1860, 2nd ed., 1886); "Porphyrii philosophi Platonici opuscula selecta".
- Lexikon Vindobonense (1867).[6]
- texts of Homer, Odyssey (1874) and Iliad (1877–1879); published as "Homerica carmina" (volume I. Ilias; volume II. Odyssea).[7]
- Iamblichus, De Vita Pythagorica (1884).[3]
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References
External links
Further reading
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