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Old High German Dictionary

Thesaurus

Dictionary: http://awb.saw-leipzig.de/cgi/WBNetz/wbgui_py?sigle=AWB

The Old High German Dictionary (Althochdeutsches Wörterbuch) fully describes the vocabulary of the earliest stage of the German language, supported by illustrative citations from corpus material. Designed to be edited in ten volumes, it provides a comprehensive analysis of the entire lexical material preserved in texts, glosses, and glossaries, covering a period of eight centuries from the beginning of written German tradition dating from 8th-century records to records from the 13th to the 15th century, provided the latter can be traced back to Old High German (OHG) sources. In terms of regional variety, the OHG Dictionary covers an area from the Alemannic-Bavarian south via various parts of Old Franconia to the Middle Low German and Old Saxon areas. The dictionary’s foundation is the material compiled by Elias von Steinmeyer (1848–1922), whose archive has continuously been supplemented. Currently, it consists of about 750,000 entries excerpted from annotated philological editions.
Along with its precise methodical approach, the complex conception of the OHG Dictionary goes back to the work of Elisabeth Karg-Gasterstädt (1886–1964) and Theodor Frings (1886–1968). It strives for comprehensive in-depth analysis and validity in all matters of language history in order to provide historic lexicography with a fundamental long-term research tool. Attested spellings are collected under a normalized headword. For each of them, phonetic, grammatical, semantic, and syntactic information is given with regard to their specific contexts. All records are analyzed and completely listed. Their contexts are quoted selectively according to their illustrative character or their degree of difficulty in order to illustrate and validate the usage of a word. Systematic references to other dictionaries of Old Germanic languages as well as of more recent stages of the German language demonstrate the regional occurrence as well as the historic development of the words.
The OHG Dictionary provides insights into the German language and culture at their earliest stage. Both language and culture acquired their distinctive features by adopting antiquity and Christianity as well as by their close relationships to Romanic and Irish-Anglo-Saxon cultures.
 

Persons

  • Prof. Dr. phil. habil. Hans Ulrich Schmid (Project Leader)
  • Dr. phil. Brigitte Bulitta (Office Site Leader)
  • Dr. phil. Eva Büthe-Scheider (Research Associate)
  • PD Dr. phil. habil. Frank Heidermanns (Research Associate)
  • Dr. phil. Aletta Leipold (Research Associate)
  • Dr. phil. Almut Mikeleitis-Winter (Research Associate)
  • Dr. phil. habil. Susanne Näßl (Research Associate)
  • Lars Scheideler M.A. (Technical Research Associate)
  • Dr. phil. Katja Schmidt (Research Associate)
  • Christina Waldvogel M.A. (Research Associate)
  • Dr. phil. Torsten Woitkowitz (Research Associate)
Running time
1952-2030
Project type
Dictionary

Contact person for the academies' programme

Sebastian Zwies M.A.

Geschäftsstelle Mainz
Union der deutschen Akademien der Wissenschaften
Geschwister-Scholl-Straße 2
55131 Mainz

Tel: 06131/218 528-17
E-Mail: sebastian.zwies@akademienunion.de