Richard Fester (20 September 1860 – 5 January 1945) was a German historian.[1][2]
Life
Richard Fester was born in Frankfurt where his father, Dr. Anselm Fester, worked as a lawyer-notary.[3] Richard attended secondary school in the city until 1881 and then volunteered for a year of military service.[2]
He undertook his university studies in History and Philology at Munich, Berlin and Strasbourg.[4] It was at Strasbourg that he passed his university final exams and also, on 6 March 1886, received his doctorate[3] for work on the Imperial Military Constitution of the Holy Roman Empire at the end of the seventeenth century.[4] His habilitation qualification followed, from Munich, on 18 November 1893.[3] Between July 1888 and September 1892 he was also working as an assistant at the Regional Archives Office in Karlsruhe.[3] From 1893 he was giving private tutorials at Munich. He moved to northern Bavaria (Franconia) in 1896, taking a post as a visiting professor in Medieval and Modern History at Erlangen, which became a full professorship three years later on 16 October 1899.[3]
On 1 April 1907 Fester switched to Kiel, taking a position as Professor of Medieval and Modern History. Less than two years later, in October 1908, he moved again, this time to Halle where he took an equivalent professorship, also becoming co-director for Historical Seminars.[3] He remained at Halle for 18 years, retiring from his position on 1 October 1926, by which time he had reached the age of 66.[3]
The Second World War ended a few months after Fester's death. From May 1945 a large part of what had been Germany was administered as the Soviet occupation zone, giving way in October 1949 to the German Democratic Republic a separate German state. Within this area the authorities compiled a list of literature to be weeded out. Several of Fester's published writings from the Nazi period were included on the list, including those identified above.[8] In 1947 his work "Friedrich Wilhelm I., Friedrich der Große und die Anfänge deutscher Staatsgesinnung" covering Prussian expansion in the eighteenth century was added to the list,[9] joined in 1953 by his analysis of international developments between 1914 and 1919.[10]
^ abcH. Eberle (Die Martin-Luther-Universität in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus 1933-1945) (2002). "Fester, Richard". Geschichtswissenschaft in Halle. Dr. Markus Meumann i.A. Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg (44. Deutscher Historikertag). Retrieved 18 February 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^ abcdefgClemens Wachter; Astrid Ley; Josef Mayr (2009). "Fester, Richard". Die Professoren und Dozenten der Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen 1743–1960. Vol. Teil 3: Philosophische Fakultät, Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät. im Auftrag des Rektors herausgegeben von der Universitätsbibliothek, Erlangen. p. 49. ISBN978-3-930357-96-3.
^ abRichard Fester (1886). Die armirten Stände und die Reichskriegsverfassung (1681 - 1697). Frankfurt Knauer. ISBN978-1-27309-323-4.