Friedrich Lütge

Friedrich Lütge [fʁiːdʁɪk lʏtgə] (21 October 1901 – 25 August 1968) was a German economist, social historian and economic historian.

He taught at the Leipzig Graduate School of Management (HHL) and at the University of Leipzig between 1940 and 1947, then moving on to the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich where he taught till a few months before he died. Through his research work between 1949 and 1968 he exercised a great influence on the understanding of economic history in West Germany. Together with Wilhelm Abel and Günther Franz he contributed decisively to research into agrarian history in Germany. He was instrumental in ensuring that social and economic history emerged as an alternative strand to the prism of historical materialism that was mainstream in many German universities during this period. From this followed an insistence in his economic research that the subject needs to be studied not simply from a theoretical quasi-mathematical standpoint, but also empirically and in the context of broader historical considerations. Provided by Wikipedia

1
by Lütge, Friedrich
Published 1952
Springer Berlin Heidelberg

2
by Lütge, Friedrich
Published 1960
Springer Berlin Heidelberg

3
by Lütge, Friedrich
Published 1966
Springer Berlin Heidelberg