Background
Johan Nicolai Madvig was born on the 7th of August, 1804 in Bornholm, Denmark.
linguist university professor autobiographer
Johan Nicolai Madvig was born on the 7th of August, 1804 in Bornholm, Denmark.
Johan Nicolai Madvig was educated at the classical school of Frederiksborg and the University of Copenhagen.
In 1828 Johan Nicolai Madvig became reader, and in 1829 professor of Latin language and literature at Copenhagen, and in 1832 was appointed university librarian. When this party came into power Madvig became Kultus Minister in the Cabinet of Moltke II and III, but left the cabinet on 7 December 1851 as a protest against the government's unity state program. In 1852 be became director of public instruction.
Some years later, from 1856 to 1863, Madvig was president of the Danish parliament and leader of the National Liberal Party. With these brief interruptions the greater part of his life was devoted to the study and teaching of Latin and the improvement of the classical schools, of which he was chief inspector. As a critic of classical texts he was distinguished for learning and acumen.
Johan Nicolai Madvig devoted much attention to Cicero, and revolutionized the study of his philosophical writings by an edition of De Finibus (1839). Other major contributions to classical scholarship are his Emendationes Livianae (1860. 2d ed 1877) and the papers collected in his Opuscula Academica ('Minor Academic Works') (1838) and Adversaria Critica (3 vols, 1871-84).
Perhaps his most widely known works are those on Latin grammar and Greek syntax, especially his Latin grammar for schools (Eng trans by G Woods). In 1874 his vision began to fail, and he was forced to give up much of his work. He continued to lecture, and in 1879 he was chosen rector of the university for the sixth time.
In 1880 Johan Nicolai Madvig resigned his professorship, but went on with his work on the Roman constitution, which was completed and published before his death. In this book Madvig takes a strongly conservative standpoint and attacks Theodor Mommsen's views on Caesar's programme of reforms. It is a clear exposition, though rather too dogmatic and without sufficient regard for the views of other scholars. His last work was his autobiography, Livserindringer (published 1887). One of his textbooks, on Latin syntax, was re-issued as recently as 2001. P.J. Jensen, "Johan Nicolai Madvig," Greece & Rome 1 (1954), 129-135.