William Witte


Prof William Witte FRSE was a 20th century scholar of the German language and German literature, working in Britain.
In 1959 he postulated that Schiller's Ode to Joy was specifically rewritten in 1803 following influence on Schiller by the works of Robert Burns.

Life

He was born in Bratislava in Slovakia on 18 February 1907, the son of William G. J. Witte. His family travelled widely, and he was educated in Poland and Austria and then attended the University of Munich in Germany. After a year at the University of Berlin he ended in Breslau University where he gained as doctorate in Economics in 1930.
In 1931 he left mainland Europe to go to Aberdeen University in Scotland asassistant lecturer in German. In 1936 he transferred to Edinburgh University in the same role for one year before returning to Aberdeen, with a PhD from Edinburgh. As a non-German German-speaker he survived the rigours of the Second World War and began to climb in position. He was created Professor of German in 1951. Most of his years in Aberdeen he li8ved on Don Street close to the university.
The University of London awarded him an honorary doctorate in 1966. In 1978 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Thomas Malcolm Knox, Fraser Noble, Robert Cross and Anthony Elliot Ritchie.
He died on 22 September 1992.

Publications

In 1937 he married Edith Mary Stenhouse Melvin, a linguist, and eldest daughter of the headmaster of Turriff Secondary School.
They had two children: Mary and John.