Krause, Karl Christian Friedrich

Krause, Karl Christian Friedrich, German philosopher, born at Eisenberg; studied under Fichte and Schelling, and was himself lecturer successively in Jena, Dresden, Berlin, Göttingen, and Münich, where he died; of the school of Kant, his work has suffered through the pedantry of his style; he wrote “The Ideal of Humanity,” and many philosophical treatises (1781-1832).

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Krapotkin, Prince Peter * Krefeld
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Koreish
Körner, Karl Theodor
Kosciusko, Thaddeus
Kossuth, Louis
Kotzebue
Koumiss
Kovalevsky, Alexander
Krakatao
Kraken
Krapotkin, Prince Peter
Krause, Karl Christian Friedrich
Krefeld
Kremlin
Kreuzer
Kriegsspiel
Krilof, Ivan Andreevich
Krishna
Krüdener, Madame de
Krüger, S. J. Paul
Krummacher, Frederick
Krupp, Alfred