Kurt Kluxen

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Kurt Kluxen (10 September 1911 – 16 April 2003) was a German historian. From 1963 to 1979 Kluxen taught as a full professor for middle and modern history at the

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
. He became known to a wider audience mainly through his History of England.

Life and career

Born in

Machiavelli (years later, he was a member of the Schieder commission). In 1954, he habilitated at the University of Cologne on Das Problem der politischen Opposition. Entwicklung und Wesen des englischen Zweiparteiensystems im 18. Jahrhundert (The Problem of Political Opposition. Development and nature of the English two-party system in the 18th century.) In 1950 he became professor at the Pedagogical Academy in Bonn and in 1960 at the University of Cologne. From 1961 to 1963 he was founding rector of the Pädagogische Hochschule in Neuss
. From 1963 until his retirement in 1979 he taught Medieval and Modern History at the University of Erlangen.

Since the 1950s Kluxen has been working on the political

history of ideas of the early modern period. His main research focus, however, was English history. Until the late 1980s, he worked on English parliamentary, party and constitutional history. His English History from the Beginnings to the Present, first published in 1968, became a standard work and was published in 1991 in a fourth edition. Kluxen was Corresponding Fellow of the Royal Historical Society in London and was awarded the 1st Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany. In 1980 he became first chairman of the Prinz-Albert-Gesellschaft [de]. Commemorative publications were dedicated to Kluxen after the completion of the sixtieth year of life in 1972 and on the occasion of his 85th birthday in 1996. Frank-Lothar Kroll published 21 smaller contributions by Kluxen. These writings are intended to represent a "representative selection [...] of his complete oeuvre". With this collection Kroll wants to provide "building blocks for a cross-border, pan-European view of history".[1] He was criticized for a view of history that was called ethnocentric and static, and placed primary focus on European or Western history.[2]

Kluxen died in Erlangen at the age of 91.

Writings

Monographs

As editor

Literature

References

External links