John George Robertson
John George Robertson (18 January 1867, Glasgow – 29 May 1933, London) was a philologist and professor of German language and literature.
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Robertson graduated with M.A. and B.Sc. from the University of Glasgow and then Ph.D. (Promotion) from Leipzig University. From 1896 to 1903 he was a lecturer in English at the University of Strassburg. At the University of London, he became in 1903 Professor of German Language and Literature[1] and in 1924 Director of the Department of Scandinavian Studies.[2] He was the founding editor-in-chief of the Modern Language Review. He wrote several books dealing with the literature of Germany and about a dozen articles for the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.[1] At the University of Oxford he delivered the 1924 Taylorian Lecture with title The Gods of Greece in German Poetry.
Richardson married Ethel Florence Lindesay Richardson, who became a novelist known under her pen name "Henry Handel Richardson". They met in 1889 in Leipzig where he was a doctoral student in philology and where she was a piano student. They married in Dublin on 30 December 1895.[3]
Selected publications
- A history of German literature. 1902. 2nd edition. 1931.[4]
- Schiller after a century. 1905.[5]
- Milton's fame on the continent. 1908.
- Outline of the history of German literature. 1911.
- Goethe and the twentieth century. 1912.
- The gods of Greece in German poetry. 1924.
References
- "Robertson, John G." Who's Who: 2099. 1919.
- "Robertson, John George (1867–1933)". Obituaries Australia, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
- Green, Dorothy "Richardson, Ethel Florence Lindesay (Henry Handel) (1870–1946)" in Australian Dictionary of Biography
- Fife, Robert Herndon (Jan 1, 1932). "J. G. Robertson, A History of German Literature (Book Review)". Germanic Review. 7: 84.
- "Review of Schiller after a Century by John G. Robertson". The Athenaeum (4053): 15. 1 July 1905.
External links
Works written by or about John George Robertson at Wikisource