(This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. T...)
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Lingg studied medicine at the universities of Munich, Freiburg, Berlin, and Prague, and became a doctor in the Bavarian Army.
His battalion was used to quell revolutionary uprisings in Baden. Forced to act against his convictions, he fell into severe depression, entered a mental hospital in 1851 and soon submitted his resignation. From that point on, he lived in Munich and devoted himself to historical and poetic studies, financially supported by King Maximilian World War II Lingg first gained attention with a collection of poems introduced by Emanuel Geibel (Stuttgart 1853).
His most famous work is Die Völkerwanderung ("The Great Migration", Stuttgart, 1866-1868, 3 vols).
He was ennobled in 1890. His manuscripts are now located in the Bavarian State Library.
There are streets named after him in both Munich and Lindau.
(This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. T...)
(Lang:- German, Pages 156. Reprinted in 2013 with the help...)
From 1839, he was a member of the Corps Suevia München.