KARL ZUMPT
\kˈɑːl zˈʌmpt], \kˈɑːl zˈʌmpt], \k_ˈɑː_l z_ˈʌ_m_p_t]\
Sort: Oldest first
-
A German classical philologist; born at Berlin, March 20, 1792; died at Karlsbad, June 25, 1849. He was appointed professor of Roman literature in the University of Berlin, 1836. His greatest work, the "Latin Grammar" (1818; 13th ed. 1874), was translated into English, and is the basis of several of the Latin grammars since compiled for the use of schools. He also prepared annotated editions of several of the Latin classics; and wrote: "Annals of Ancient Kingdoms, Nations, etc". (1819), in Latin; "The Roman Knights and the Equestrian Order" (1840); "On the Duration of the Philosophic Schools at Athens, and the Succession of the Scholarchs" (1843); "On the Law and the Proofs of Extortion" (Repetundarum; 1845); "The Personal Liberty of the Roman Citizen, and its Legal Guarantees" (1846).
By Charles Dudley Warner