
Jacob Burckhardt in 1892
'Jacob Burckhardt' (
May 25,
1818,
Basel,
Switzerland –
August 8,
1897, Basel) was a
Swiss historian of
art and
culture, fields which he helped found.
Siegfried Giedion described Burckhardt's achievement in the following terms: "The great discoverer of the age of the
Renaissance, he first showed how a period should be treated in its entirety, with regard not only for its painting, sculpture and architecture, but for the social institutions of its daily life as well."
[1] Burckhardt's best known work is ''
The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy'' (1860).
Life
The son of a Protestant clergyman, Burckhardt studied theology in Basel and in
Neuchâtel until 1839, when he moved to the
University of Berlin to study history, especially art history, then a new field. At Berlin, he attended lectures by
Leopold von Ranke, the founder of history as a respectable academic discipline based on sources and records rather than his own opinions. He spent part of 1841 at the
University of Bonn, studying under the art historian
Franz Kugler, to whom he dedicated his first book, ''Die Kunstwerke der belgischen Städte'' (1842). He taught at the University of Basel from 1843 to 1855, then at
ETH, the engineering school in
Zurich. In 1858, he returned to Basel to assume the professorship he held until his 1893 retirement. Only starting in 1886 did he teach art history exclusively. He twice declined offers of professorial chairs at German universities, at the
University of Tübingen in 1867, and Ranke's chair at the University of Berlin in 1872.
See ''Life'' by Hans Trog in the ''Basler Jahrbuch'' for 1898, pp. 1-172.
Work

Jacob Burckhardt on a Swiss one thousand franc banknote
Burkhardt's historical writings did much to establish art history as an academic discipline, and also have literary value in their own right. His innovative approach to historical research emphasized the value of culture and art when analyzing the social and political trends underlying historical events.
In
1838 he made his first journey to Italy, and published his first important articles, ''Bemerkungen über schweizerische Kathedralen'' ("Remarks about Swiss Cathedrals"). In
1847 he brought out new editions of Kugler's two great works, ''Geschichte der Malerei'' and ''Kunstgeschichte'', and in 1853 published his own work, ''Die Zeit Constantins des Grossen'' ("The Age of Constantine the Great"). He spent the greater part of the years 1853–1854 in Italy, collecting materials for his 1855 ''Der Cicerone: Eine Anleitung zum Genuss der Kunstwerke Italiens'' (7th German edition, 1899), also dedicated to Kugler. This work, "the finest travel guide that has ever been written"
[2] which covered
sculpture and
architecture, as well as painting, became an indispensable guide to the art traveller in Italy.
About half of the original edition was devoted to the art of the
Renaissance. Thus Burckhardt was naturally led to write the two books for which he is best known, his 1860 ''Die Cultur der Renaissance in Italien'' ("The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy") (English translation, by SGC Middlemore, in 2 vols., London, 1878), and his 1867 ''Geschichte der Renaissance in Italien'' ("The History of the Renaissance in Italy"). ''The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy'' was the most influential interpretation of the Italian Renaissance in the 19th century and is still widely read. Burckhardt and the German historian
George Voigt founded the historical study of the Renaissance. In contrast to Voigt, who confined his studies to early Italian humanism, Burckhardt dealt with all aspects of Renaissance society.
Burkhardt considered the study of ancient history an intellectual necessity and was a highly respected scholar of Greek civilization. "The Greeks and Greek Civilization" sums up of the relevant lectures, "Griechische Kulturgeschichte", which Burckhardt first gave in 1872 and which he repeated until 1885. At his death, he was working on a four-volume survey of Greek civilization.
Friedrich Nietzsche, appointed professor of classical philology at Basel in 1869 at the age of 24, admired Burckhardt and attended some of his lectures. Nietzsche believed Burckhardt agreed with the thesis of his ''The Birth of Tragedy'', namely that Greek culture was defined by opposing "Apollinian" and "Dyonisian" tendencies. Nietzsche and Burkhardt enjoyed each other's intellectual company, even as Burckhardt kept his distance from Nietzsche's evolving philosophy. Their extensive correspondence over a number of years has been published. Burckhardt's student
Heinrich Wölfflin succeeded him at the University of Basel at the age of only twenty-eight.

His grave
There is an interesting tension in Burkhardt's persona between the wise and worldly student of the
Italian Renaissance, and the cautious product of Swiss Calvinism who had studied extensively for the ministry. The Swiss polity in which he spent nearly all of his life was a good deal more democratic and stable than was the norm in 19th century Europe. As a Swiss, Burkhardt was also cool to German nationalism and to German claims of cultural and intellectual superiority. He was also amply aware of the rapid political and economic changes taking place in the Europe of his day, commenting in his lectures and writings on the
Industrial Revolution, the European political upheavals of his day, and the growing European nationalism and militarism. Events amply fulfilled his prediction of a cataclysmic 20th century, in which violent demagogues (whom he called "terrible simplifiers") would play central roles. Burckhardt the prophetic pessimist and cautious liberal, the German language counterpart to
Tocqueville and
Lord Acton, and the author of three volumes reprinted by the Liberty Fund, has some following among contemporary conservative political and moral philosophers. On Burckhardt the political and social thinker, see Sigurdson (2004).
Divers
Theodore Ziolkowski, in his introduction to the English translation of
Hermann Hesse's ''
The Glass Bead Game'', asserts that Hesse's character Father Jacobus is based on Burckhardt.
Burckhardt is depicted on the Swiss 1000 franc banknote.
In 1872, upon
Leopold von Ranke's retirement from the University of Berlin, Burckhardt was offered Ranke's erstwhile chair in history, but he declined the offer.
Notes
1. Siegfried Giedion, in ''Space, Time and Architecture'' (6th ed.), p 3.
2. Giedion, p. 4.
References
Primary:
★ 1878. ''
The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy''. The Middlemore translation of the 1860 German original.
★ 1990. ''The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy''. Penguin Classics. ISBN 0-14-044534-X
★ 1999. ''The Greeks and Greek Civilization'', Oswyn Murray, ed. New York: St Martin's Griffin. ISBN 0-312-24447-9
Liberty Fund reprints:
★ 1929. ''
Judgements on History and Historians.'' Translated by Harry Zohn. Foreword by Alberto Coll.
★ ''The Letters of Jacob Burckhardt''. Selected, edited, and translated by Alexander Dru. Foreword by Alberto Coll.
★ 1943. ''Reflections on History''. Introduction by Gottfried Dietze.
Secondary:
★ Grosse, Jurgen, 1999, "Reading History: On Jacob Burckhardt as Source-Reader," ''Journal of the History of Ideas 60'': 525-47.
★ Howard, Thomas Albert, 1999. ''Religion and the Rise of Historicism:
W.M.L. De Wette, Jacob Burckhardt, and the Theological Origins of Nineteenth-Century Historical Consciousness,'' Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-65022-4
★ Sigurdson, Richard, 2004. ''Jacob Burckhardt's Social and Political Thought''. Univ. of Toronto Press.
External links
★
★
Jakob Burckhardt Renaissance - Cultural history.
★
A Brief Biography.