
Adolf Furtwängler
'Adolf Furtwängler' (
June 30,
1853 -
October 10,
1907) was a famous
German archaeologist and
art historian. He was the father of the conductor
Wilhelm Furtwängler and mathematician
Philipp Furtwängler, and grandfather of the
German archaeologist Andreas Furtwängler.
Furtwängler was born at
Freiburg im Breisgau, and was educated there, at
Leipzig and at
Munich, where he was a pupil of
Heinrich Brunn, whose comparative method in
art criticism he much developed. He took part in the excavations at
Olympia in
1878, became an assistant in the
Berlin Museum in
1880, and professor at
Berlin (
1884) and later at Munich. His latest excavation work was at
Aegina.
Furtwangler was amongst the first archaeologists to appreciate the chronological value of pottery sherds when they previously been discarded as spoil. By noting the recurrence of similar vases within a variety of strata Furtwangler was able to use these sherds as a tool for dating sites. His joint publication with
Georg Loeschcke in 1886 of ''Mykenische Vasen'' , a complete publication of the Mycennean pottery finds on Aegina, was not only a valuable chronology but the first corpus of pottery finds in archaeology.
[1]
His 1891 reconstructions of the
Lemnian Athena by
Phidias were celebrated but have subsequently occasioned dispute; they may be found in the
Dresden Albertinum.
Furtwängler was a prolific writer, with a prodigious knowledge and memory, and a most ingenious and confident critic; and his work not only dominated the field of archaeological criticism but also raised its standing both at home and abroad. Among his numerous publications the most important were a volume on the bronzes found at Olympia, vast works on ancient gems and Greek vases, and the invaluable ''Masterpieces of Greek Sculpture'' (English translation by
Eugenie Strong). He died at
Athens.
References
1. 150 years of archaeology, Glyn Daniel, p. 167
★ The article is available
here.