Dr. Phil. Ludwig Pollak

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Dr. Phil. Ludwig Pollak

Also Known As: "Dr. Ludwig Pollak", "Ludovico"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Praha, Hlavní město Praha, Hlavní město Praha, Czech Republic
Death: after October 16, 1943
KZ Auschwitz, Oświęcim, Oświęcim, Małopolskie, Poland
Immediate Family:

Son of Abraham (Adolpho) Pollak and Karoline Pollak
Husband of Margarethe Pollak and Julia Pollak
Father of Wolfgang Pollak; Angelina Pollak and Susanna Pollak
Brother of Hermine Wurm; Bertha Weissberger and Max (Max) Pollak

Occupation: Dr. Philosophy, Kaiserlicher Rat Archäologe in Rome, Italy
Managed by: Randy Schoenberg
Last Updated:

About Dr. Phil. Ludwig Pollak

Birth record https://www.geni.com/documents/view?doc_id=6000000141887015349

Deported 10/16/1943 from Rome, Italy

Wikipedia: Ludwig Pollak (14 September 1868, Prague – 1943, Auschwitz concentration camp) was an Austro-Czech classical archaeologist, antiquities dealer, and director of the Museo Barracco di Scultura Antica in Rome. He is perhaps best known for discovering in 1906 the missing right arm of Laocoön in the famous ancient Roman sculpture Laocoön and His Sons. The rest of the statue had been discovered in 1506, with the arm as well as several other pieces, including the arms of the sons and parts of the snake, missing. The Renaissance sculptor Michelangelo had correctly suggested that the missing right arms were originally bent back over the shoulder; however, most others disagreed, opting for a reconstructed arm in an heroic extended fashion. This incorrectly reconstructed arm was added to the statue. In 1906, Pollak discovered a fragment of a marble arm in a builder‘s yard in Rome, close to the findspot of the rest of the statue. Noting a stylistic similarity to the Laocoön group he presented it to the Vatican Museums: it remained in their storerooms for half a century. In 1957 (after Pollak's death) the museum decided that this arm—bent, as Michelangelo had suggested—had originally belonged to this Laocoön, and replaced it. According to Paolo Liverani: "Remarkably, despite the lack of a critical section, the join between the torso and the arm was guaranteed by a drill hole on one piece which aligned perfectly with a corresponding hole on the other".



            
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Dr. Phil. Ludwig Pollak's Timeline

1868
September 14, 1868
Praha, Hlavní město Praha, Hlavní město Praha, Czech Republic
1902
December 1, 1902
No. 1755/II, Praha, Hlavní město Praha, Hlavní město Praha, Czechia (Czech Republic)
1905
1905
1910
December 9, 1910
Roma, Roma, Lazio, Italy
1943
October 16, 1943
Age 75
KZ Auschwitz, Oświęcim, Oświęcim, Małopolskie, Poland