Johannes Kunisch


Johannes Kunisch was a German historian. He held chairs of early modern history at the Goethe University Frankfurt. and the University of Cologne. Through his publications Kunisch became one of the leading German early modern historians. His biography Frederick the Great, published in 2004 and widely acclaimed, gave lasting impulses to Prussian research.

Life and career

Born in Berlin, Kunisch came from a Prussian educated middle-class family. He was the son of the Munich professor of German studies Hermann Kunisch. In 1955 he passed the Abitur at the Wittelsbacher-Gymnasium München. Kunisch initially intended to become an art dealer. At the instigation of his father he did not put this plan into practice. However, he has pursued this interest throughout his life as a collector of modern art.
From 1957 to 1963 Kunisch studied history and history of art and law at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and the Free University of Berlin. In Munich he studied with Franz Schnabel, Johannes Spörl and Hans Sedlmayr. In Berlin his academic teachers were Wilhelm Berges, Carl Hinrichs and Hans Kauffmann. In Munich he received his doctorate from Spörl in 1963 with a topic on medieval architectural history of the 12th century. Kunisch was assistant to Friedrich Hermann Schubert at the Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel from 1963 to 1968 and at the Goethe University Frankfurt from 1968 to 1972. From 1967 to 1969 he received a habilitation grant from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft for a habilitation project on the Austrian field marshal Ernst Gideon von Laudon, for which he also had to carry out major archival studies in Vienna. However, the "complete biography" planned on Field Marshal Laudon did not come about. Kunisch was habilitated in Frankfurt in the summer of 1971 on the "small war" and the army of the enlightened absolutism.
Since 1972, he has taught at the University of Frankfurt as H 2 Professor. In 1976 he was appointed full professor for Medieval and Modern History at the University of Cologne. There, he succeeded Ricardo Krebs, where he remained until his retirement in 2002. He declined a call in 1975 to the Philipps-Universität Marburg as successor to Gerhard Oestreich, as well as a call to the University of Erlangen–Nuremberg as successor to Kurt Kluxen. Among his academic students are Hans-Wolfgang Bergerhausen, Franz Josef Burghardt, Johannes Burkhardt, Harm Klueting, Helmut Neuhaus, Andreas Pečar, Gorch Pieken, Michael Rohrschneider, Lothar Schilling, Anton Schindling, Michael Sikora, Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger and Aloys Winterling.
In 1992/93 Kunisch was a member of the founding senate of the University of Potsdam, since 1997 he was a full member of the North Rhine-Westphalian Academy of Sciences, Humanities and the Arts. Kunisch was a member of the. Since 1974 he was co-editor of the newly founded ' and was also the editor of the first 29 volumes. The editorial board of the journal opted for a new periodization model. The late Middle Ages were detached from traditional medieval studies and linked to early modern times. The journal was to be dedicated to the "study of the late Middle Ages and early modern times". Under his leadership the Zeitschrift für Historische Forschung developed into the probably leading German journal for late medieval and early modern studies. Kunisch was one of the first historians to use the term Early Modern systematically. An essay Über den Epochencharakter der frühen Neuzeit from 1975 is considered to be the impulse for this newly developing historical sub-discipline. Kunisch, and above all his student Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger as editor, also led to a consistent opening of the journal to cultural studies topics. Since 1993 he was co-editor of the journal ' and since 1991 editor of the . From 1988 to 2005 he was chairman of the.
His main research topics were the history of absolutism in Germany, the history of Prussia in the 18th century, military history of the early modern period, historical biography as well as the history of Frederick the Great. The dissertation dealt with the Doppelkirche Schwarzrheindorf and the influence that Conrad III and the Archbishop of Cologne had on the construction of the building. Using the example of a chapel house from Staufer At that time Kunisch tried "to draw an extension of the knowledge of general history from the research of an architectural legacy". His dissertation was unusually interdisciplinary for the time.
One of the main aims of his research was to "penetrate state and war in thought". In his habilitation thesis he asked about the connection between state conflicts in the 18th century and the structure of early modern statehood. His habilitation thesis was the starting point for work on the "Little War", the "Miracle of the House of Brandenburg" and the house laws of the dynastic princely states. In 1986, he published a comprehensive account of absolutism, Kunisch presented a multi-volume edition of the writings of Gerhard von Scharnhorst. In November 2000 Kunisch held a conference in Berlin on the occasion of the 300th anniversary of the royal elevation of the House of Brandenburg. The contributions were published in 2002.
Kunisch achieved fame far beyond the specialist world in 2004 with a comprehensive and repeatedly published biography of the Prussian king. The biography is regarded as a standard work on the Prussian king. In his biography Kunisch also took art into account in detail. Whole chapters deal with the builder, the art collector, the writer and the general patron of the arts and sciences. Kunisch always also established a connection to the political biography of the Prussian king. The biography is regarded as his most important work. In 2011 Kunisch published a brief introduction about the Prussian ruler Frederick II.
Kunisch died in Bonn on 2 March 2015 at the age of 78 and was buried in Iffeldorf in Upper Bavaria.

Writings

A list of publications appeared in Helmut Neuhaus, Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger : Menschen und Strukturen in der Geschichte Alteuropas. Festschrift für Johannes Kunisch zur Vollendung seines 65. Lebensjahres, dargebracht von Schülern, Freunden und Kollegen. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin among others 2002,,.
Monographs
Editions