- Johann Caspar von Orelli
Johann Caspar von Orelli (
February 13 ,1787 –January 6 ,1849 ), was a Swiss classical scholar.He was born at
Zürich of a distinguished Italian family which had taken refuge in Switzerland at the time of theProtestant Reformation . His cousin,Johann Conrad Orelli (1770-1826), was the author of several works in the department of laterGreek literature .From 1807 to 1814 Orelli worked as preacher in the reformed community of
Bergamo , where he acquired the taste forItalian literature which led to the publication of "Contributions to the History of Italian Poetry" (1810) and a biography (1812) ofVittorino da Feltre , his ideal of a teacher.In 1814 he became teacher of modern languages and history at the cantonal school at
Chur ; in 1819, professor of eloquence andhermeneutics at the Carolinum in Zürich, and in 1833 professor at the newUniversity of Zürich , the foundation of which was largely due to his efforts. His attention during this period was mainly devoted to classical literature and antiquities. He had already published (1814) an edition, with critical notes and commentary, of the "Antidosis" ofIsocrates , the complete text of which, based upon the manuscripts in the Ambrosian and Laurentian libraries, had been made known byAndreas Mystoxedes ofCorfu .The three works upon which his reputation rests are the following:
#A complete edition ofCicero in seven volumes (1826-1838). The first four volumes contained the text (new ed., 1845-1863), the fifth the old Scholiasts, the remaining three (called "Onomasticon Tullianum") a life of Cicero, a bibliography of previous editions, indexes of geographical and historical names, of laws and legal formulae, of Greek words, and the consular annals. After his death, the revised edition of the text was completed by JG Baiter and K Halm, and contained numerous emendations byTheodor Mommsen and JN Madvig.
#"The works ofHorace " (1837-1838). The exegetical commentary, although confessedly only a compilation from the works of earlier commentators, shows great taste and extensive learning, although hardly up to the exacting standard of modern criticism.
#"Inscriptionum Latinarum Selectarum Collectio" (1828; revised edition byW Henzen , 1856), extremely helpful for the study of Roman public and private life and religion. His editions ofPlato (1839-1841, including the old "scholia", in collaboration withA. W. Winckelmann ) and Tacitus (1846-1848) also deserve mention.He was a most liberal-minded man, both in politics and religion, an enthusiastic supporter of popular education and a most inspiring teacher. He took great interest in the struggle of the Greeks for independence, and strongly favoured the appointment of the notorious
J. F. Strauss to the chair ofdogmatic theology at Zürich, which led to the disturbance ofSeptember 6 1839 and the fall of the liberal government.References
* "Life" by his younger brother Conrad in "Neujahrsblatt der Stadtbibliothek Zürich" (1851)
*J. Adert , "Essai sur la Vie el les Travaux de J.C.O." (Geneva, 1849)
*H. Schweizer-Sidler , "Gedächtnissrede auf J.C.O." (Zürich, 1874)
*Conrad Bursian , "Geschichte der klassischen Philologie in Deutschland" (1883).
*1911
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