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Oswald Orth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Professor Doctor
Oswald Orth
Born1832 (1832)
Died13 December 1920(1920-12-13) (aged 87–88)
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Rostock
ThesisVersuch einer Theorie der historischen Wissenschaft (1869)
Academic work
DisciplinePhilology
Sub-disciplineEnglish Literature
InstitutionsUniversity of Liège
Notable studentsPaul Hamelius, Camille Huysmans

Oswald Orth (1832–1920) was the first professor of English Literature at the University of Liège.

Life

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Orth was born in 1832 in Weilbach, now a subdivision of Flörsheim am Main, in the Duchy of Nassau. In 1869 he obtained a doctorate from the University of Rostock with a thesis on the philosophy of history. He became a teacher of German at the Athénée royal de Liège. At the creation of the department of Germanic philology of the University of Liège in 1890, he was appointed to teach English philology, comparative grammar of the Germanic languages, and historical grammar of German.[1] He was president of the organising committee of the second conference of the Association belge des professeurs de langues vivantes, held in September 1909.[2]

Orth retired in 1904, and was succeeded as professor of English Literature by his former doctoral student, Paul Hamelius, and in comparative grammar by Joseph Mansion. At his death, on 13 December 1920, he bequeathed his personal library to the university.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Juliette Dor, "Medieval English Studies in Belgium", in Medieval English Studies: Past and Present, edited by Akio Oizumi and Toshiyuki Takamiya (Tokyo, 1990), p. 21.
  2. ^ Bulletin bibliographique et pedagogique du Musée belge, 13-14 (1909), p. 64.
  3. ^ 1890-1990: Cent ans de philologie germanique (Liège, 1990), p. 79