Family Ernst Stadler was born on 11 August 1883 in Colmar, Alsace-Lorraine as the second son of Xavier Stadler and Regine Catherine Stadler (
née Abrell). Alsace-Lorraine had been incorporated into the
German Empire twelve years prior. His father Xavier was a Catholic from a poor family in
Sonthofen. He later became a lawyer and worked in the Prussian
Ministry of Justice from 1896 to 1906, and then later worked as the Deputy Curator of the
Kaiser-Wilhelms-Universität in
Strasbourg. In contrast, his mother Regine was a Protestant from a commercial family in
Kempten. His older brother, Hans Stadler, was born on 30 April 1880, and became Lord Mayor of
Kassel from 1925 to 1933, when he was forced to resign by the
Nazis. Hans died in
Berlin in February 1943. During the 22-23 October 1943
bombing of Kassel, Han's house - which also contained his younger brother's papers - were destroyed. After graduating from the gymnasium, he enrolled in early 1902 at Strasbourg University where he studied German language and literature, with French and Comparative Literature as his subsidiary subjects. Stadler then went to the
University of Munich to study philosophy after doing military service in 1902 to 1903. In December 1904, he published his first volume of poetry,
Präludien. He was awarded his first doctorate in 1906 from Strasbourg University, and in 1908 was again awarded by the university a higher doctorate. Stadler was also a German Rhodes Scholar at Magdalen College, Oxford in the
United Kingdom from 1906 to 1908, along with some additional time in 1910. He was however not particularly happy living at Magdalen, due to his belittlement by the dons and his social alienation from the college's culture. In mid-1907, Stalder sought permission to spend more time at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar so he could do a
Bachelor of Letters, which was accepted by the Rhodes Trust. After spending more time studying in Germany, he returned to the UK for the 1910 summer term. With his work on the Wieland edition and at Brussels, Stadler fell behind on his Bachelor of Letters dissertation on the history of the criticism of Shakespeare in Germany. He submitted it on 3 December 1911 and was then awarded his Bachelor of Letters on 25 March 1912. == Career ==