Christian Wernicke

Christian Wernicke (January 1661 5 September 1725) was a German epigramist and diplomat.[1] His surname has also been spelled Wernigke, Warneck, and Werneke.

Christian Wernicke
BornJanuary 1661
Died1725
NationalityGerman
OccupationEpigramist, diplomat

Biography

Wernicke was born in Elbing (Elbląg), Royal Prussia, Poland. After attending school in Elbing and Thorn (Toruń), Wernicke studied philosophy and poetry under Daniel Georg Morhof at the University of Kiel in Holstein. He then spent three years at the court of Mecklenburg and took educational trips to Holland, France, and England, before settling in Hamburg in 1696, where he worked as a private scholar. From 1714-1723 he worked as an ambassador for the court of Denmark.

Wernicke's clear and rationale diction stands in contrast to that of his contemporaries Christian Hoffmann von Hoffmannswaldau and Christian Heinrich Postel. Wernicke was openly hostile to Christian Friedrich Hunold. He died in Copenhagen in 1725.

Wernicke's satirical writings were rediscovered by Johann Jakob Bodmer and were praised by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing and Johann Gottfried Herder in 1749.

gollark: An undirected graph, which is nice, but I probably want to do a similar thing with directed graphs at some point.
gollark: It is an adjacency matrix for a graph.
gollark: Or I could just compress an actual adjacency list, but boooooring.
gollark: Thusly, I somehow need to store VAST highly sparse bit matrices efficiently another way. I'm thinking quadtrees.
gollark: It appears that the algorithm or possibly library I wanted to use for efficiently storing sparse bit matrices was in fact 3 slow, and thus unusable for the sheer speed of osmarksßsearchengine™ 1.4..6..4....1.

References

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