For the journalist and revolutionary, see Ferdinand Wolff.
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations.(March 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Ferdinand Wolf (8 December 1796, Vienna – 18 February 1866, Vienna) was a scholar of Romance studies from Austria. He was an author of literary studies as well as a publisher of periodicals, including the Jahrbuch für Romanische und Englische Literatur.
Wolf studied philosophy and law at the University of Graz, and then literature at the University of Vienna. In 1819, after graduation, he became a scrivener at the kaiserlichen Hofbibliothek, now the Austrian National Library, and was later promoted to research fellow. He was succeeded in this office by his son Adolf. In 1847, Wolf was involved with the foundation of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, which he served as secretary. He is buried in Vienna.
FerdinandWolf (8 December 1796, Vienna – 18 February 1866, Vienna) was a scholar of Romance studies from Austria. He was an author of literary studies...
Fallersleben und Moritz Haupt an FerdinandWolf ("Letters of Hoffmann von Fallersleben and Moritz Haupt to FerdinandWolf", 1874); J. M. Wagner, Hoffmann...
Löbl, 1975–1979 Gerd Leitgeb, 1979–1986 Günter Wessig, 1986–1988 Franz FerdinandWolf, 1988–1993 Peter Rabl, 1993–2005 Christoph Kotanko, 2005- 31 July 2010...
by Alessandro d'Ancona and Alexander Veselovsky (who in turn cited FerdinandWolf). Nevertheless, Paul Collura defends Olivia's historicity, writing that...
assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand was one of the key events that led to World War I. Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, heir presumptive to...
in Spanish poetry, fiction, and essays. The Austrian Romance scholar FerdinandWolf, a friend of Agustín Durán, was particularly interested in the romancero...
founded chair of Romance philology at the University of Leipzig. With FerdinandWolf he founded and edited the Jahrbuch für Romanische und Englische Literatur...
Charles Durieu de Maisonneuve, French botanist (d. 1878) December 8 – FerdinandWolf, Romance philologist from Austria (d. 1866) December 9 – Emilie Zumsteeg...
into French by Magnabal; and German by Nikolaus Heinrich Julius and FerdinandWolf. The second American edition appeared in 1854; the third, corrected...
Ferdinand Benedikt von Schirach[citation needed] (born 12 May 1964[citation needed]) is a German lawyer and writer. He published his first short stories...
Ferdinand Freiherr von Beschwitz (26 December 1798 – 26 August 1874), Lord of the Castle of Arnsdorf in the Kingdom of Saxony, was a German nobleman and...
former of which was introduced into the Directory), Alexander Poggio, FerdinandWolf, as well as a number of other persons who were officers of the 1st and...
Friedrich Wilhelm von Thiersch († 1860), Friedrich Wöhler († 1882), FerdinandWolf († 1866) Art: Albrecht Adam († 1862), Anton von Auersperg (Anastasius...
Hagen is the daughter of German singer Nina Hagen and Dutch musician Ferdinand Karmelk. As a child, she lived in London, Berlin, Paris, Ibiza, Lüneburg...
Bizerk, Broken Chanter, and the rock band Franz Ferdinand. She replaced Paul Thomson in Franz Ferdinand, receiving a symbolic set of drumsticks from him...
23ten Merz 1798 einen Wolf" ("Here Ferdinand, Count of Stolberg- Wernigerode shot a wolf on 23 March 1798"). This was the last wolf living in the wild that...
Wolf Mendlin was born into a Jewish family in Mogilev in 1842. In about 1862 he went to Germany, where he studied the labour movement under Ferdinand...
was now that the world outside Vienna would recognize Wolf as well. Tenor Ferdinand Jäger, whom Wolf had heard in Parsifal during his brief summer break...