After the completion of his university studies at Kiel[?], Leipzig[?] and Berlin, he travelled for three years in France and Italy; in 1839 he became Privatdozent at Kiel, and in 1842 professor-extraordinary of archaeology and philology at Greifswald (ordinary professor 1845).
In 1847 he accepted the chair of archaeology at Leipzig, of which he was deprived in 1851 for having taken part in the political movements of 1848-1849. In 1855 he was appointed professor of the science of antiquity, and director of the academical art museum at Bonn, and in 1865 he was called to succeed E. Gerhard at Berlin. He died at Göttingen.
The following are the most important of his works:
His Griechische Bilderchroniken was published after his death, by his nephew A Michaelis, who has written an exhaustive biography in Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, xiii.; see also J Vahlen, Otto Jahn (1870); C Bursian, Geschichte der classischen Philologie in Deutschland.
This entry was originally from the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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