Wilhelm Wisser

Wilhelm Wisser (27 August 1843, Klenzau (Ostholstein district) – 13 October 1935, Oldenburg) was a German teacher and dialectologist. He is remembered as a narrator of Low German legends and fairy tales.

He took classical studies at the Universities of Kiel and Leipzig, obtaining his doctorate in 1869 with a thesis on the ancient poet Tibullus, "Quaestiones Tibullianae".[1] Beginning in 1877, he taught classes at the Mariengymnasium in Jever. From 1887 to 1902, he was a senior instructor in Eutin, afterwards teaching classes at the gymnasium in Oldenburg (1902–1908).[2]

Gravestone of Wisser in Klenzau.

While working as a schoolteacher in Eutin and Oldenburg, he compiled Low German fairy tales by conducting interviews with numerous individuals. From 1898 to 1909, he interviewed in the region between the cities of Fehmarn and Lübeck, approximately 230 men and women, mostly elderly and rural persons, who still had recollections of the old tales. These stories were then edited and published by Wisser.[2][3]

Today he is commemorated by a thoroughfare in Lübeck, (Wilhelm-Wisser-Weg) and by a junior high school in Eutin (Wilhelm-Wisser-Realschule).[4]

Selected works

References

  1. WorldCat Title Quaestiones Tibullianae
  2. 1 2 Wilhelm Wisser Biographie + Literaturliste - T-Online biography of Wisser
  3. German dialects: phonology and morphology, with selected texts by Rudolf Ernst Keller
  4. "Statement based on translated text from an equivalent article at the German Wikipedia".
  5. OCLC Classify published works
  6. de.Wikisource Bibliography of Wisser


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