Jump to content

Max Maria von Weber: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Undid revision 761990129 by 86.69.180.215 (talk) Undo added title in name, I see no references to this addition
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Max Maria [[Freiherr]] von Weber''' (25 April 1822 in [[Dresden]] – 18 April 1881 in [[Berlin]]) was a [[German people|German]] [[civil engineer]] who contributed to the development of [[railways]] in [[Austria]] and [[Germany]].
'''Max Maria von Weber''' (25 April 1822 in [[Dresden]] – 18 April 1881 in [[Berlin]]) was a [[German people|German]] [[civil engineer]] who contributed to the development of [[railways]] in [[Austria]] and [[Germany]].


He was born in [[Dresden]], the son of the composer [[Karl Maria von Weber]], and received his early training in the Dresden schools. Part of his experience was gained under [[Isambard Kingdom Brunel]] and [[George Stephenson]] in [[England]]. In 1850, he entered the civil service of his native kingdom. In 1870 he went to [[Vienna]], where he did much toward the extension of Austrian railways. In 1878 he was called in a similar capacity to [[Berlin]].
He was born in [[Dresden]], the son of the composer [[Karl Maria von Weber]], and received his early training in the Dresden schools. Part of his experience was gained under [[Isambard Kingdom Brunel]] and [[George Stephenson]] in [[England]]. In 1850, he entered the civil service of his native kingdom. In 1870 he went to [[Vienna]], where he did much toward the extension of Austrian railways. In 1878 he was called in a similar capacity to [[Berlin]].

Revision as of 01:00, 26 January 2017

Max Maria von Weber (25 April 1822 in Dresden – 18 April 1881 in Berlin) was a German civil engineer who contributed to the development of railways in Austria and Germany.

He was born in Dresden, the son of the composer Karl Maria von Weber, and received his early training in the Dresden schools. Part of his experience was gained under Isambard Kingdom Brunel and George Stephenson in England. In 1850, he entered the civil service of his native kingdom. In 1870 he went to Vienna, where he did much toward the extension of Austrian railways. In 1878 he was called in a similar capacity to Berlin.

Writings

Outside of his official duties Weber found time for considerable writing, in the line of general literature as well as on technical matters. Among his works may be cited:

  • Schule des Eisenbahnwesens (1857)
  • Karl Maria von Weber; ein Lebensbild (1864–66)
  • Die Praxis des baues und Betriebs der Sekundärbahnen (1873)
  • Nationalität und Eisenbahnpolitik (1876)
  • Vom rollenden Flügelrad (posthumously published by M. Jähns, with biography, 1882)

Notes

References

  • Gilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). "Weber, Max Maria von" . New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.