Ludvig Cæsar Martin Aubert

{{Short description|Norwegian philologist}}

File:Ludvig Cæsar Martin Aubert OB.F03393C.jpg

Ludvig Cæsar Martin Aubert (30 March 1807 – 14 June 1887) was a Norwegian philologist.

Biography

Aubert was born in Christianssand (now Kristiansand), Norway.{{cite encyclopedia|year=2007|title=Ludvig Cæsar Martin Aubert|encyclopedia=Store norske leksikon|editor=Henriksen, Petter|publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|url=http://www.snl.no/Ludvig_C%C3%A6sar_Martin_Aubert|language=Norwegian|access-date=15 April 2010}} He was the son of Benoni Aubert (1768–1832) and Jakobine Henriette Thaulow (1776–1833). His brother Michael Conrad Sophus Emil Aubert (1811–1872) became a jurist and was County Governor of Nordre Bergenhus Amt (now Sogn og Fjordane).{{cite web|url =https://lokalhistoriewiki.no/wiki/Aubert|title= Aubert|publisher = lokalhistoriewiki.no |access-date= April 1, 2018}}{{cite web|url = https://lokalhistoriewiki.no/wiki/Michael_Conrad_Sophus_Emil_Aubert_(1811%E2%80%931872)|title= Michael Conrad Sophus Emil Aubert (1811–1872)|publisher= lokalhistoriewiki.no|access-date= April 1, 2018}}

Aubert had an academic career. He was a professor of Latin philology at the Royal Frederick University from 1840 to 1875. His main work, Den latinske Verbalflexion, is largely obsolete.

Aubert and his wife Ida Dorothea Mariboe (1811–1900) had two sons who also became academics: Fredrik Ludvig Andreas Vibe Aubert (1851–1913), an art educator and historian; and Ludvig Mariboe Benjamin Aubert (1838–1896), a professor.{{cite web|url = https://snl.no/Ludvig_Mariboe_Benjamin_Aubert|title= Ludvig Mariboe Benjamin Aubert|publisher = Store norske leksikon

|author=Knut Dørum|access-date= April 1, 2018}}{{cite encyclopedia|year=|title=Andreas Aubert|encyclopedia=Norsk biografisk leksikon|first=Nils|last=Messel|editor=Helle, Knut|publisher=Kunnskapsforlaget|location=Oslo|url=http://www.snl.no/.nbl_biografi/Andreas_Aubert/utdypning|language=Norwegian|access-date=14 April 2010}}

References