Rudolph-Antoniana
Over the course of its twenty-eight-year existence it had 331 pupils, all lords, who had their coats of arms inscribed in its register. These included Peter Friedrich Arpe, Karl Friedrich Hieronymus Freiherr von Münchhausen (basis for the character Baron Münchhausen) and Anton Wilhelm Amo (pupil 1717–1721; the first known German philosopher and legal scholar of African origin). They came not only from the Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg itself, but from other German states and even from other countries, with the latter coming to the academy to learn German.
Pupils were also taught theology, law, history, mathematics, mechanics, Latin, Italian, French, riding, shooting, fencing and dancing. Optional subjects included English and Spanish. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz praised its professors' high qualifications. They included the mathematicians and architects Johann Balthasar Lauterbach (1663−1694) and Leonhard Christoph Sturm (1669−1719; taught 1694–1702). The academy finally closed in 1715.
References
- ^ Kwasi Wiredu, William Emmanuel Abraham, A Companion to African Philosophy, Blackwell Publishing, 2004, S. 192.
- ^ (in German) Helmut Glück, Deutsch als Fremdsprache in Europa. Vom Mittelalter bis zur Barockzeit, Walter de Gruyter 2002, S. 135 f.
- ^ (in German) R. Fürst, W. Kelsch: Lauterbach und Sturm an der Ritterakademie. In: Wolfenbüttel: Bürger einer fürstlichen Residenz; fünfzig biographische Porträts, Grenzland-Verlag Rock 1982.
Bibliography
- (in German) Alfred Kuhlenkamp: Die Ritterakademie Rudolf-Antoniana in Wolfenbüttel 1687–1715 (= Beiträge zur Geschichte der Carolo-Wilhelmina. Band 3). Braunschweigischer Hochschulbund, Braunschweig 1975.
- (in German) Joseph König: Beiträge zur Geschichte der Stadt Wolfenbüttel. Aus Anlaß der 400jährigen Wiederkehr der Verleihung von Marktrecht und Wappen im Auftrage der Stadt Wolfenbüttel. Selbstverlag der Stadt, Wolfenbüttel 1970.