Born in Dessau, he attended the Cathedral gymnasium at
Brandenburg an der Havel, later became a clerk in the German Post Office and in 1897 he was appointed director of the telegraph lines in
Berlin. Although he had already launched a white collar career, his deep love for classical literature and ancient history led him to closely follow the lectures of great scholars of the time, such as the philologist
Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, epigraphist
Hermann Dessau and philologist
Paul M. Meyer, by whom he was introduced to the study of
papyrology. In 1903 Preisigke graduated from the
University of Halle with a thesis supervised by the orientalist
Ulrich Wilcken. In 1908 he became Director of Telegraphs in Strasbourg, and in 1913 was appointed professor at the Faculty of Philosophy of the
University of Strasbourg. In June 1915 he was elected an extraordinary member of the Academy of Sciences in Heidelberg, and in 1918 founded the
Institut für Papyrologie in the same city, which continues today to be Germany's leading centre of papyrology. ==Works==