- August Friedrich Gfrörer
August Friedrich Gfrörer (1803-1861), German historian, was born at Calw, in
Württemberg ,5 March 1803 . Obedient to the wishes of his parents, but against his own inclinations, he devoted himself to the study oftheology ; was a student at the "Little Evangelical Seminary" ofTübingen from 1817-21, and from 1821-25 continued his studies at the higherseminary of the same place. He completed his education by a series of scientific travels throughSwitzerland andItaly , after which he returned to his "alma mater".In 1829, he was appointed
vicar in the city ofStuttgart . Having by this time lost all belief in revealed religion, he became convinced that to continue his pastoral duties would involve him in serious conflict; he therefore resigned his vicarage. At the recommendation of Victor von Bonstetten, a friend of his father, he was appointed third librarian of the public library of Stuttgart (1830) with the title of professor. During his numerous hours of leisure he applied himself with vigour and enthusiasm to the study of literature and history. As the fruit of these labours he published in the following year (1831) his work on "Philo und die judisch-alexandrinische Theosophie" (2 vols., Stuttgart, 1831). This work was preparatory to his larger work entitled "Kritische Geschichte des Urchristenthums" (Stuttgart, 1838, in 5 vols.). In it Gfrörer, probably impelled byDavid Strauss 's "Leben Jesu", sought to conceive historically the life and teaching ofChrist , and, although writing as a rationalist throughout, he strongly disclaims being "an adherent of the modern champion of negative truths", (i.e. of Strauss).In the first part, with the sub-title "Das Jahr des Heils", he investigates the time in which Christ lived; in the second, entitled "Heilige Sage", he treats of the authenticity and literary character of the first three
Gospels , and in the third, "Das Heiligthum and die Wahrheit", he discusses the "Gospel of John ". The work, therefore, is a detailed investigation of the character and significance of theNew Testament from an historical point of view, and is based on a wealth of materials. At the same time he studied the history of theThirty Years' War , and in 1835 (in Stuttgart) published "Gustav Adolf, König der Schweden und seine Zeit" (4th ed., 1863), in which by emphasizing the political role of the Swedish king he took a position diametrically opposed to the views previously held byProtestant s.An equally profound impression, especially in
Catholic circles, was produced by his "Allgemeine Kirchengeschichte" (4 vols., Stuttgart, 1841-46). Closing with the year 1305, it emphasises the part played by the Catholic Church in the development of theGerman Empire , and extols the policy of thepope s. Shortly afterwards he was appointed professor of history at the Catholic University ofFreiburg (Breisgau) -- an appointment which at first sight appears surprising, inasmuch as he was a rationalist, the results of those investigations were not at all times in harmony withChristian doctrine. His call, however, is quite intelligible in view of the tendencies of his recent writings, and of his fair treatment of religious questions, which seemed to indicate a gradual return to more conservative religious opinions. In 1848, he was elected to the GermanParliament atFrankfurt as representative of a district of Württemberg; he belonged to the greater German party, and was a fanatical opponent ofPrussia . It is a notable fact that, while in Parliament, he proposed a motion for the reunion of Catholics and Protestants, but only on condition that theHoly See would promise never to permit theJesuit s orRedemptorist s to settle on German soil.In 1853 he entered the Catholic Church, after all the other members of his family had taken the same step. His later publications are: "Geschichte der ost- und westfränkischen Karolinger" (Freiburg, 1848, 2 vols.); "Die Urgeschichte des menschlichen Geschlechts" (Schaffhausen, 1855, 2 vols., incomplete), a demonstration that neither critical history nor the natural sciences, in treating of the origin and earliest history of the human race, can lay claim to certainty, when opposed to the earliest traditions of mankind and especially to
Holy Writ ; "Papst Gregorius VIII and sein Zeitalter" (Schaffhausen, 1859-61, in 7 vols.), a part of his "Church History", notable for its brilliant scholarship and conscientious research. Many volumes of lectures were published posthumously: "Geschichte des 18. Jahrhunderts" (Schaffhausen, 1862-73; Vols. I-IV byJohann Baptist Weiss ; second part of the fourth vol. by Tiedemann, Basle, 1884); "Zur Geschichte deutscher Volksrechte im Mittelalter" (Schaffhausen, 1865, 2 vols.); "Byzantinische Geschichten" (Graz, 1872-74, 2 vols.). His "Prophetae veteres pseudepigraphi latine versi" (Stuttgart, 1840), with translation, is critically unsatisfactory.Gfrörer was a man of unusual ability; he possessed great acumen and great powers of bold and correct combination. He was a prolific author, although his literary researches were sometimes lacking in method. He died at
Karlsbad on6 July 1861 .
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