June 26

© 1997, 1998 by Paul A. Schons

 

 

June 26, 1826

Birth of Adolf Bastian in Bremen, Germany. Bastian proposed a theory of cultural evolution which has similarities to and may have influenced Carl Jung's idea of the collective unconscious.

June 26, 1829

Death of Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein in Haina, Germany. Tischbein was a portraitist. Tischbein is remembered primarily because he was a friend of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and painted the portrait of him "Goethe in the Campagna". (Other artists in the Tischbein family gained more note than Johann Heinrich Wilhelm.)

June 26, 1856

Death of Max Stirner (pseudonym of Johann Kaspar Schmidt) in Berlin, Germany. Stirner was a philosopher in whom 19th and 20th Century anarchists have found inspiration. His most widely know book is Der Einzige und sein Eigentum of 1845. He had worked extensively with Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations and in his own views gave the ultimate primacy to individualism.

June 26, 1881

Death of Theodor Benfey in Nörten, Germany. Benfey was a professor at the University of Göttingen. He made significant contributions to the study of Sanskrit and linguistics.

June 26, 1898

Birth of Willy Messerschmitt in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Aircraft designer at the Bayerische Flugzeugwerke in Augsburg, which ultimately became the Messerschmitt-Bölkow-Blohm corporation.

June 26, 1943

Death of Birth of Karl Landsteiner in New York (born in Vienna). He won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1930 for the discovery of blood groups and developing a system of blood typing.

June 26, 1906

Birth of the author, Stefan Andres, in Breitwies, Germany.

June 26, 1948

Start of the Berlin Air Lift.

June 26, 1957

Death of Alfred Döblin in Emmendingen, Germany. Döblin was a novelist of the Expressionist period. During WWII he lived in the United States. His works include, Wallenstein, Berge, Meere und Giganten and Berlin Alexanderplatz.

June 26, 1963

John F. Kennedy visits Berlin. In pledging solidarity and support to the people of Berlin, he made the famous speech which concluded with the words, "Ich bin ein Berliner". At that time the Berlin Blockade had been tried, the people of East Berlin had tried to revolt and the wall had been built.

June 26, 1988

Death of Hans Urs von Balthasar. Hans Urs von Balthasar was born in Lucerne, Switzerland on August 12, 1905. He studied philosophy and German literature at the universities of Zurich, Vienna and Berlin. He became a Jesuit in 1929. He completed his theological studies with Henri de Lubac. He left the Jesuit order due to conflicts in views in 1950. Over time his work gained the admiration of such leaders in theology as Pope John Paul II, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, Henri de Lubac and Bishop Karl Lehmann. In 1988 he was named a cardinal by Pope John Paul II but died two days before the ceremony (June 26, 1988). Important works by Balthasar include, Herrlichkeit (1961-1969), Cordula (1966), Theodramatik (1973-1983), Die antirömische Affekt (1974) and Theologik (1985).