Gustav Gröber

Gustav Grober ( born May 4, 1844 in Leipzig, † November 6, 1911 in Ruprechtsau in Strasbourg ) was a German linguist.

Life

He studied in Leipzig, habilitated in 1871 in Zurich, there has been an associate professor in 1873 and was followed in 1874 an appointment as full professor at the University of Breslau. In 1880 he moved to Strasbourg. In conjunction with professional colleagues he edited the layout of the Roman Philology ( 1888-1906 ). Since 1877 he worked as an editor of the Journal of Romance Philology.

Gröbers floor plan

  • (Ed. ) Floor plan of the Roman Philology, 4 vols, Strasbourg 1888-1902 ( only the first band experienced a second edition; details to the 2nd edition below in italics)

First volume

  • History and role of the Roman philology. Sources of the Romance Philology and their treatment. Romance Linguistics. Register, Strasbourg 1888, 853 pages; 2nd Edition, 1904 to 1906, 1093 pages
  • History of the Latin Philology ( Gustav Grober ) 1-139; 1-185
  • Task and structure of the Romance Philology ( Gustav Grober ) 140-156; 186-202
  • The written sources with 4 panels ( William Schum [ 1846-1892 ] ), 157-196; (revised by Harry Bresslau ) 205-253
  • The oral sources ( Gustav Grober ) 197-208; 254-266
  • Methodology and tasks of linguistic research ( Gustav Grober ) 209-250; 267-317
  • Methodology of philological research ( Adolf Tobler ) 251-282; 318-360
  • Methodology of literary-historical research ( Adolf Tobler ) 361-368
  • Celtic language (Ernst Windisch ) 283-312; 371-404
  • The Basques and Iberians (Georg Gerland ) 313-334; 405-430
  • The Italic languages ​​( Wilhelm Deecke ) 335-350; ( and Wilhelm Meyer- Lübke ) 431-450
  • The Latin language in the Latin countries ( Wilhelm Meyer- Lübke ) 351-382; 451-497
  • Novels and Germans in their interaction ( Friedrich Kluge ) 383-397; 498-514
  • The Arabic language in the Latin countries ( Christian Friedrich Seybold [ 1859-1921 ] ), 398-405; 515-523
  • The non-Latin elements in Romanian ( Moses Gaster ) 406-414; ( Kristiansand field Jensen ) 524-534
  • The Romance languages. Their Classification and external history ( Gustav Grober ) 415-437; 535-563
  • The Romanian language ( Hariton Tiktin ) 438-460; 564-607
  • The Romansh dialects ( Theodor Gartner) 461-488; 608-636
  • The Italian ( Francesco D' Ovidio and Wilhelm Meyer- Lübke ) 489-560; 637-711
  • The French and Provençal language and its dialects ( Hermann Suchier ) 561-668; 712-840
  • Catalan (Alfred Morel - Fatio ) 669-688; ( and Jean -Joseph Saroïhandy ) 841-877
  • The Spanish language ( Gottfried Baist ) 689-714; 878-915
  • The Portuguese language ( Jules Cornu ) 715-803; 916-1037
  • The Latin elements in Albanian ( Gustav Meyer) 804-822; ( Revised: by Wilhelm Meyer- Lübke ) 1038-1058
  • Name, property and word registers 823-853; 1059-1093

Second volume

  • 2nd Division, Strasbourg 1897, 496 pages The Literatures of Romance peoples: 2 Provencal literature ( Albert Stimming ) 1-69
  • 3 Catalan literature (Alfred Morel - Fatio ) 70-128
  • 4 History of Portuguese Literature ( Carolina Michaëlis de Vasconcelos and Teófilo Braga) 129-382 ( Braga come the last 35 pages)
  • 5 The Spanish literature ( Gottfried Baist ) 383-466

3 Division, Strasbourg 1901, 603 pages

  • The Literatures of Romance peoples: 6 Italian Literature ( Tommaso Casini ) 1-217
  • 7 Romansh literature ( Caspar Decurtins ) 218-261
  • 8 Romanian literature ( Moses Gaster ) 262-428
  • A. To Romanesque States History ( Harry Bresslau ) 431-515
  • For example, Roman cultural history ( Alwin Schultz ) 516-532
  • C. to Romanesque Art History ( Alwin Schultz ) 533-549
  • D. To the History of Science of the Latin peoples ( Wilhelm diaper tape ) 550-578
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