Lothar Hyss (5 March 1960 â 19 March 2022) was a German historian.
Hyss was born in RzÃÂdzów (known as Friedrichsfelde before 1945) and - since his father was a specialist needed to rebuild post-war Silesia - it was only later that the family moved to Germany, with Hyss learning Polish as a second native language. After taking a German abitur he studied art history in Bonn, West Germany and worked for ten years as a research assistant in the Haus Schlesien in Königswinter. He submitted his dissertation to the University of Bonn in 1996. He died in Everswinkel.
From 1 April 1998 until retiring for health reasons in April 2021 Hyss was director of the West Prussian State Museum in Münster. During that tenure he collaborated with museums in former West Prussia such as Gdaà Âsk's Historical Museum and National Museum, built a branch of the museum in Krockow, and moved the main museum into its new home in the former Franciscan Monastery in Warendorf. In 2016 the Historical Commission for East and West Prussian Regional Research (of which Hyss had been a full member since 2001), Hyss and the Copernicus Association invited participants to a conference at the Museum entitled âÂÂCulture of Remembrance and Museums using Prussia as an example".
Hyss organised: