Wilhelm Meyer-Lübke
Wilhelm Meyer-Lübke was a Swiss philologist of the Neogrammarian school of linguistics.Biography
Meyer-Lübke, a nephew of Conrad Ferdinand Meyer, was born in Dübendorf, Switzerland. He studied Indo-European philology at Zürich and at Berlin. He obtained his PhD in Romance philology with a dissertation on Die Schicksale des lateinischen Neutrums im Romanischen. After a stay in Italy, he qualified to lecture at Zürich and then attended lectures by Gaston Paris in Paris.
While lecturing at Zürich in 1887, he was appointed associate professor of comparative linguistics at Jena. From there he was called in 1890 to Vienna, where he was from 1892 to 1915 professor of Romance philology, as well as serving as dean and rector. He then went to Bonn, where he was appointed to the professorship formerly held by Friedrich Diez. However, Meyer-Lübke soon felt the difference between the cosmopolitan Vienna and provincial Bonn. He consoled himself with lecture tours and visiting professorships abroad. Meyer-Lübke was a leading Romance linguist of his time.- Grammatik der romanischen Sprachen published in 4 volumes between 1890 and 1902.
- Einführung in das Studium der romanischen Sprachwissenschaft, 1901.
- Romanisches etymologisches Wörterbuch, Heidelberg, C. Winter, 1911.