University of Vienna - Main page

Gerhart Ladner

Born: 01-03-1905
Faculty: Philosophical School
Category: Expelled teacher
Gerhard LADNER (born on January 3rd, 1905 in Vienna, died on September 21st, 1993 in Los Angeles) was private lecturer for Medieval History at the Philosophical School of the University of Vienna.
He was persecuted in times of Nazism as a Jew lost his position on April 22nd, 1938 and was forced to leave the university. Ladner, the son of an industrialist, attended secondary school in Vienna’s 19th district, graduated in 1924 and then studied medieval history, art history and archeology at the University of Vienna. In 1930 he obtained his doctorate. From 1927 to 1929 he was a member of the Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung (Institute for Austrian History Research) and until 1931 an assistant at the “Monumenta Germaniae Historica” in Berlin and Munich. In 1932 he worked on numismatic topics for the Österreichischer Ausschuss für historische Ikonographie (Austrian Committee on Historical Iconography) and from 1931 until 1933 also acted as the secretary of the Österreichische Gesellschaft für die Geschichte der Ikonographie (Austrian Society for the History of Iconography) as well as of the Interne Kommission für Geschichtswissenschaft (Internal Commission for Historical Science). From 1933 to 1938 he held a scholarship at the Österreichisches Historisches Institut (Austrian Historical Institute) in Rome,[1] where - with the permission of the pope - he worked on a two-volume medieval papal iconography.[2] Only a few weeks before the “Anschluss”, in January 1938, Ladner habilitated as a private lecturer for medieval history and historical ancillary disciplines at the University of Vienna, which was to later help him receive scientific work overseas. Although he had converted from Judaism to Catholicism in 1933,[3] he was classified as a “Jew” according to the “Nuremberg Laws”. For this reason, the ministry of education revoked his teaching license after the “Anschluss”, on April 22nd, 1938.[4] Ladner emigrated to London in 1938 and moved on to Canada in October of that same year. Here he worked as a lecturer for Early Christian and medieval art history as well as medieval history at the Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies in Toronto. In 1940 he became an assistant professor of medieval history and archaeology at the University of Toronto and served in the Intelligence Service of the Canadian army from 1943 until the end of the war. After the war he did not return to the University of Vienna or Austria in general, even though the department had put him in third place on the list of nominees for a vacant chair previously occupied by Hans Sedlmayer.[5] He declined a call to the University of Innsbruck because of “personal, domestic reasons”.[6] An invitation to teach as visiting professor at the philosophical faculty of the University of Vienna in October 1946 ultimately also did not work out.[7] In that same year he moved to the USA, where he taught as assistant professor and then associate professor at the University of Notre Dame, Indiana. In 1951 he became professor for art history at Howard University in Washington, D.C., and then switched to a position as associate professor at Fordham University in New York the year after that. Here Ladner taught until 1962 and advanced to being a full professor of history. Apart from this he also took up a position at Columbia University in 1953. From 1963 until he received emeritus status in 1974, he taught at the University of California in Los Angeles. Lastly he also worked as a distinguished visiting professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and as visiting professor at the Center for Byzantine Studies in Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C. Some of his most famous works are “Theologie vor dem Investiturstreit. Abendmahlstreit, Kirchenreform, Cluny und Heinrich III.” (1936), “The idea of reform. Its impact on Christian thought and action in the age of the fathers” (1959) and “Die Papstbildnisse des Altertums und des Mittelalters” (1941, 1970, 1984).[8] Among other things, he was a member of the Medieval Academy of America, corresponding member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, and member of the American Catholic Historical Association, the American Renaissance Society as well as the Dante Society. From 1949 until 1951 and from 1960 until 1961 he furthermore belonged to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. Ladner was bearer of the Haskins Medal of the Medieval Academy of America (1961).[9]


Lit.: Austrian State Archive/AVA, PA Ladner; Archive oft he University of Vienna/PH PA 2401, PHIL GZ 659 ex 1937/38; Ulrike Wendland, Biographisches Handbuch deutschsprachiger Kunsthistoriker im Exil. Vol. 2, Munich 1999; Werner Röder/Hannah Caplan (eds.), Biographisches Handbuch der deutschsprachigen Emigration nach 1933. Vol. 2, Munich 1983; MÜHLBERGER 1993, 44; Hans H. Aurenhammer: Das Wiener Kunsthistorische Institut nach 1945, in: GRANDNER/HEISS/RATHKOLB 2005, 174-188; Gernot Heiß, Von Österreichs deutscher Vergangenheit und Aufgabe. Die Wiener Schule der Geschichtswissenschaft und der Nationalsozialismusin, in: ders./Siegfried Mattl/Sebastian Meissl/Edith Saurer/Karl Stuhlpfarrer (eds.), Willfährige Wissenschaft. Die Universität Wien 1938 bis 1945, Vienna 1989, 38-76.


[1] Ulrike Wendland, Biographisches Handbuch deutschsprachiger Kunsthistoriker im Exil. Bd. 2, München 1999.

[2] UA, PA, fol. 15, Curriculum vitae, o. D.

[3] Wendland, Handbuch.

[4] UA, PHIL GZ 659-1937/38, O.-Nr. 72, PHIL Dekanat an Ladner, 23. 4. 1938.

[5] Hans H. Aurenhammer: Das Wiener Kunsthistorische Institut nach 1945, in: Margarete Grandner/Gernot Heiss/Oliver Rathkolb (Hrsg.), Zukunft mit Altlasten. Die Universität Wien 1945 bis 1955 (Querschnitte 19), Innsbruck – Wien – Bozen 2005, 174-188, 175.

[6] Gernot Heiß, Von Österreichs deutscher Vergangenheit und Aufgabe. Die Wiener Schule der Geschichtswissenschaft und der Nationalsozialismusin, in: ders./Siegfried Mattl/Sebastian Meissl/Edith Saurer/Karl Stuhlpfarrer (Hrsg.), Willfährige Wissenschaft. Die Universität Wien 1938 bis 1945, Wien 1989, 38-76, 75 (Fußnote 200).

[7] UA, PA, fol. 59, PHIL Dekanat an Ladner, 19. 10. 1946. Vgl. auch Ladner an PHIL Dekanat, 7. 12. 1946. Eine Beurlaubung im Wintersemester 1947/48 kam demnach an Ladners neuer Wirkungsstätte, der Notre Dame University, nicht in Frage.

[8] Wendland, Handbuch.

[9] Werner Röder/Hannah Caplan (Hrsg.), Biographisches Handbuch der deutschsprachigen Emigration nach 1933. Bd. 2, München 1983.


Andreas Huber

For questions or comments on this person use our: » feedback form.