Karl Gottlob Zumpt

Karl Gottlob Zumpt

Karl Gottlob (Carolus Timotheus) Zumpt (1 April 1792, Berlin – 25 June 1849) was a German classical scholar known for his work in the field of Latin philology.

Educated at Heidelberg and Berlin, he was from 1812 onward, a schoolteacher at Friedrich Werder Gymnasium in Berlin. In 1821 he transferred as a professor to the Joachimsthal Gymnasium, also in Berlin. In 1827 he was appointed professor of classical philology at the University of Berlin.[1]

His chief work was his "Latin Grammar" ("Lateinische Grammatik"", 1818), which stood as a standard work until superseded by Johan Nicolai Madvig's textbook in 1844 (In Danish: "Latinsk Sproglære til Skolebrug").[2] He edited Quintilian's "Institutio Oratoria" (Volume 5, 1829. a project started by Georg Ludwig Spalding),[3] as well as works by Quintus Curtius Rufus and Cicero:

Otherwise, he primarily devoted his time and efforts to Roman history, publishing "Annales veterum regnorum et populorum" (3rd ed. 1862),[4] a work in chronology down to 476 AD, and other antiquarian studies.

He was the uncle of August Wilhelm Zumpt.

Notes

  1. List of works Berlin, 2002
  2. WorldCat Title Latinsk Sproglære til Skolebrug
  3. Gustav Emil Lothholz (1900), "Zumpt, Gottlob", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German) 45, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 481–484
  4. WorldCat Identities Most widely held works about Karl Gottlob Zumpt

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External links

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