- Johann Georg Graevius
Johann Georg Graevius (properly Guava or Greffe) (
January 29 ,1632 -January 11 ,1703 ) was a Germanclassical scholar andcritic . He was born atNaumburg .Graevius was originally intended for the
law , but made the acquaintance ofJohann Friedrich Gronovius during a casual visit toDeventer , under whose influence he abandoned jurisprudence forphilology . He completed his studies underDaniel Heinsius at Leiden, and among others under theProtestant theologianDavid Blondel atAmsterdam .During his residence in Amsterdam, under Blondel's influence he abandoned
Lutheranism and joined theReformed Church ; and in 1656 he was called by the Elector ofBrandenburg to the chair ofrhetoric in theUniversity of Duisburg . Two years afterwards, on the recommendation of Gronovius, he was chosen to succeed that scholar at Deventer; in 1662 he moved to the University of Utrecht, where he occupied first the chair of rhetoric, and in addition, from 1667 until his death, that ofhistory and politics.Graevius enjoyed a very high reputation as a teacher, and his lecture-room was crowded by pupils, many of them of distinguished rank, from all parts of the world. He was honoured with special recognition by Louis XIV, and was a particular favourite of
William III of England , who made himhistoriographer royal.His two most important works are the "Thesaurus antiquitatum Romanarum" (1694-1699, in 12 volumes), and the "
Thesaurus antiquitatum et historiarum Italiae " published after his death, and continued by the elder Pieter Burmann (1704-1725), although these have not always been looked upon favourably [Not, for example, in J.-C. Brunet, "Manuel du libraire et de l’amateur des livres", Paris 1842-1844, who calles this last work 'poorly researched'.] . His editions of the classics, although they marked a distinct advance in scholarship, are now for the most part superseded. They include "Hesiod " (1667), "Lucian ", "Pseudosophisla" (1668), "Justin", "Historiae Philippicae" (1669), "Suetonius" (1672), "Catullus ", "Tibullus etPropertius " (1680), and several of the works ofCicero , which are considered his best.He also edited many of the writings of contemporary scholars.
References
*1911
*The "Oratio funebris" by Burmann (1703) contains an exhaustive list of the works of this scholar.
*P.H. Kulb in Ersch and Gruber's "Allgemeine Encyklopädie", Leipzig 1818
*J.E. Sandys, "History of Classical Scholarship", part ii, Cambridge 1908
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