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Baehrens was the son of Paul
Baehrens, a businessman, and his wife Maria (née Hagen). After the death of his father (1850), his mother married Dr. G. A. Hesse, who became like a second father to Baehrens. He was originally supposed to become a businessman, but in accordance with his aptitude Baehrens
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After his return in the autumn of 1873 Baehrens qualified as a professor at the
Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena with the article "De Sulpiciae quae vocatur satira, commentatio philologica." In the following years he took further research trips: from January to April 1874 he visited the libraries
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181:. As a continuation of the collection Baehrens published in 1886 through the Teubner-Berlag the "Fragmenta poetarum Romanorum", which are today separated from the "Fragmenta poetarum Latinorum" by Willy Morel, Karl Büchner, and Jürgen Blänsdorf.
111:, who gave him metrical and paleographical exercises, which brought him in 1868 to the Philological Seminar. In 1870 Baehrens took the "Oberlehrerexamen" and earned his doctorate. From 1871 to 1872 his deepened his studies at the
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of Löwen, Brüssel, and Paris, and from March to August 1875, Paris, London, and Oxford. In the summer semester of 1877 he was given the position of professor, and spent several years as a professor at the
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His greatest undertaking were the "Poetae latini minores," which from 1879 until 1883 appeared in five volumes from the publisher
Teubner-Verlag. They were newly edited by
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In the next eleven years he held many lectures and visited the library in London once again. In
Groningen he married the daughter of his colleague
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131:, a professor of history. On 26 September he succumbed to an abscess of the brain after 26 days. One of his three surviving children,
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attended the
Friedrich-Wilhelm-Gymnasium in Cologne. And after his final exam, he began his studies in classical philology at the
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142:("Catulli Veronensis liber", 1876, with a large commentary published as second volume in 1885), "Panegyrici Latini",
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During his research, Emil
Baehrens brought forth many important editions of different Latin authors, including
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from 1910 until 1923. The first edition appeared in 1930 as a new adaptation by
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Jahresbericht ĂĽber die
Fortschritte der klassischen Altertumswissenschaft
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103:. Most influential on Baehrens was Lucian MĂĽller, as well as
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51:. He published editions of many Latin authors, including
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47:. In 1877 he was appointed ordinary professor at the
202:Archiv fĂĽr lateinische Lexikographie und Grammatik
77:Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
271:Academic staff of the University of Groningen
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37:After completing his studies he became
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16:German classical scholar (1848-1888)
213:, "Emil Baehrens (1848–1888)", in
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204:, 5th vol 1888, pp. 606–608
66:also became a classical scholar.
166:("Dialogus de oratoribus"), and
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200:Nekrolog von J. W. Beck, in:
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154:("Tibullinische Blätter"),
20:Paul Heinrich Emil Baehrens
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281:University of Bonn alumni
266:German classical scholars
162:("Lectiones Hortianae"),
148:Publius Papinius Statius
79:. His teachers included
26:– 26 September 1888, in
125:University of Groningen
49:University of Groningen
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211:D.R. Shackleton Bailey
175:Friedrich Karl Vollmer
144:Gaius Valerius Flaccus
228:Poetae latini minores
113:University of Leipzig
286:Writers from Cologne
93:August Reifferscheid
89:Friedrich Heimsoeth
34:classical scholar.
156:Sextus Propertius
117:Friedrich Ritschl
59:and minor poets.
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133:Wilhelm Baehrens
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250:Categories
57:Propertius
105:Otto Jahn
28:Groningen
24:Bayenthal
152:Tibullus
140:Catullus
62:His son
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30:) was a
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160:Horace
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