- Friedrich Thiersch
Friedrich Wilhelm Thiersch (
June 17 ,1784 –February 25 ,1860 ), was a German classical scholar and educationist.Biography
He was born at Kirchscheidungen near
Freiburg on theUnstrut . In 1809 he became professor at the gymnasium atMunich , and in 1826 professor of ancient literature at the University of Landshut; he was transferred in that year to Munich where he remained till his death. Thiersch, the "tutor of Bavaria" ("praeceptor Bavariae"), found an extremely unsatisfactory system of education in existence. There was a violent feud between theProtestant "north" and theCatholic "south" Germans; Thiersch's colleagues, chiefly oldmonk s, offered violent opposition to his reforms, and an attempt was made upon his life. His plans were nevertheless carried out, and became the governing principle of the educational institutions ofBavaria .Thiersch was an ardent supporter of Greek independence. In 1832 he visited
Greece , and his influence is said to have helped secure the throne of the newly created kingdom forOtto of Bavaria . He wrote aGreek grammar , a metrical translation ofPindar , and an account of Greece ("L'état actuel de la Grece" in 1833).Thiersch's biography was written by his son,
H.W.J. Thiersch (1866). Another son,Karl Thiersch , was a renownedsurgeon , and yet another,Ludwig Thiersch , was an influential painter.References
*1911
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