1911 Encyclopædia Britannica/Freund, Wilhelm
FREUND, WILHELM (1806–1894), German philologist and lexicographer, was born at Kempen in the grand duchy of Posen on the 27th of January 1806. He studied at Berlin, Breslau and Halle, and was for twenty years chiefly engaged in private tuition. From 1855–1870 he was director of the Jewish school at Gleiwitz in Silesia, and subsequently retired to Breslau, where he died on the 4th of June 1894. Although chiefly known for his philological labours, Freund took an important part in the movement for the emancipation of his Prussian co-religionists, and the Judengesetz of 1847 was in great measure the result of his efforts. The work by which he is best known is his Wörterbuch der lateinischen Sprache (1834–1845), practically the basis of all Latin-English dictionaries. His Wie studiert man klassische Philologie ? (6th ed., 1903) and Triennium philologicum (2nd ed., 1878–1885) are valuable aids to the classical student.