Johannes Ilberg

Johannes Ilberg (10 July 1860, Magdeburg 20 August 1930, Leipzig) was a German educator and classical philologist who was the author of numerous works on ancient Greek medicine. His father, Hugo Ilberg (1828-1883), was a gymnasium director, and his uncle, Friedrich von Ilberg (1858-1916), was a personal physician to Kaiser Wilhelm II.

Biography

Ilberg studied philology, archaeology, history and philosophy in Leipzig, Bonn and Berlin. At the University of Bonn, he was greatly influenced by philologist Hermann Usener; at the University of Leipzig, he received his doctorate under the sponsorship of Otto Ribbeck. Later on, he served as a gymnasium rector in Wurzen (from 1910), Chemnitz (from 1914) and at the Queen Carola gymnasium in Leipzig (1916-24). He was co-editor (since 1897) and editor (19141929) of the educational series "Neuen Jahrbücher für das klassische Altertum, Geschichte und deutsche Literatur", a publication that was also referred to as Ilbergs Jahrbücher ("Ilberg's Yearbook"). In 1925 it was renamed "Neuen Jahrbücher für Wissenschaft und Jugendbildung".[1]

Gravesite of Ilberg at Südfriedhof in Leipzig.

Published works

  • Das Hippokrates-Glossar des Erotianos und seine ursprüngliche Gestalt, 1893 The Hippocratic glossary of Erotianos.
  • Hippocratis Opera quae feruntur omnia, 1894-1902 (2 volumes, with Hugo Kühlewein).
  • Die Sphinx in der griechischen Kunst und Sage, 1896 The sphinx in Greek art and legend.
  • Aus Galens Praxis; ein Kulturbild aus der römischen Kaiserzeit, 1905 On Galen's experience; a cultural image of the Roman Empire.
  • Zwei vorträge zur Geschichte der Antiken Medizin, 1909 (with Max Wellmann) Two lectures on the history of ancient medicine.
  • Die Überlieferung der Gynäkologie des Soranos von Ephesos, 1910 The tradition of gynaecology involving Soranus of Ephesus.
  • Rufus von Ephesos, ein griechischer Arzt in trajanischer Zeit, 1930 Rufus of Ephesus, a Greek physician in the Trajanic period.[2]

Ilberg was the author of numerous articles in Wilhelm Heinrich Roscher's "Ausführliches Lexikon der griechischen und römischen Mythologie" (Concise dictionary of Greek and Roman mythology).[1]

gollark: Onto more important things: functional programming - do it, or do it continuously all the time?
gollark: This entire argument is ridiculous. Just store ASTs on disk and have your editor convert to your preferred syntax on-demand.
gollark: The great thing about representing functions as an infinite set of ordered pairs is that defining inverse functions is really easy.
gollark: Functions are just monoids in the category of endofunctors.
gollark: Too bad, I don't have any of those things.

References

  1. Ilberg, Johannes Deutsche Biographie
  2. Most widely held works by Johannes Ilberg OCLC WorldCat Identities
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.