Walter von Boetticher

Walter von Boetticher (11 December 1853 – 3 July 1945) was a German historian, genealogist and physician.

Walter von Boetticher was born at Riga, the son to the art historian Friedrich von Boetticher (1826–1902) and his wife Eugenie Mitschke (1825–1858). After attending the Dresden Kreuzgymnasium (School of the Cross), he studied medicine at Würzburg, Marburg and Jena from 1873 to 1877, receiving his doctorate in 1878 with the thesis ''Über Reflexhemmung'' (''On Reflex Inhibition''). He then worked as a general practitioner at Bertelsdorf in Bavaria, and Stolpen and Göda in Saxony.

Boetticher's first works on regional history date to the 1870s. After he moved to Bautzen in 1905 he concentrated exclusively on historical research, which he continued after he moved to Dresden in 1908, and to the Oberlößnitz district of Radebeul in 1912. At Oberlößnitz he lived at ''Villa Oswald Haenel'', which had been designed by and was home to Oswald Haenel, who had died the year before.

He published numerous essays on the history of Upper Lusatia and its nobility, and, between 1912 and 1923, his life's work the ''Geschichte des Oberlausitzischen Adels und seiner Güter 1635–1815'' (''History of the Upper Lusatian Nobility and its Estates 1635–1815''), which was published in four volumes. In 1904 Boetticher was entered in the Saxon ''Adelsmatrikel'' (''Register of nobility''), and in 1905 was made an honorary member of the ''Oberlausitzische Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften'' (''Upper Lusatian Society of Sciences''). In 1907 he became an honorary knight of the Order of St John. In 1929 he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Breslau, and received the Goethe-Medaille für Kunst und Wissenschaft (Goethe Medal for Art and Science) in 1943 on his 90th birthday.

In 1880 Boetticher married Isabella Wippermann (1859–1943), daughter to the landowner Hermann Anton Wippermann of Weddelbrook in Holstein, with whom he had four children. Boetticher died on 3 July 1945 at Radebeul and was interred in the municipal cemetery at Bautzen.

In 1952 his son, Friedrich von Boetticher, bequeathed the Sammlung Boetticher (Boetticher Collection) to the Herder-Institut in Marburg. It contains 230 bibliographical titles, some in several volumes, from his father's original history library, including the complete ''Lusatian Magazine'' in 25 volumes from 1768, and the ''New Lusatian Magazine'' from 1822 to 1941. Provided by Wikipedia
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by Boetticher, Walter von
Published 1927
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