Johannes von Müller (born Jan. 3, 1752, Schaffhausen, Switz.—died May 29, 1809, Kassel, Westphalia [Germany]) was a Swiss scholar and public official who was the most important Swiss historian of the 18th century.
Müller’s life was marked by the tension between his work as a scholar and his activity as a diplomat and political journalist at the court of the archbishop of Mainz (1786–92) and in the imperial chancery at Vienna (1793–98). In the last years of his life he entered the service of Napoleon as director of education for the kingdom of Westphalia, and his posthumous reputation was long clouded by what was unjustly interpreted as a betrayal of the idea of freedom.
His most important work was Geschichten Schweizerischer Eidgenossenschaft (1786–1808; “History of the Swiss Confederation”). In it he combined a comprehensive knowledge of chronicle sources (especially Aegidius Tschudi) with a terse elegance that earned him the title of the Swiss Tacitus; Tacitus, the 1st-century-ad Roman historian, was indeed his model. His idealistic and patriotic picture of the ancient Swiss constitution profoundly influenced the 19th-century European view of Switzerland. (Among other things, it was the source for Friedrich Schiller’s Wilhelm Tell.) Müller’s attempt at universal history, the 24 Bücher allgemeiner Geschichten (1810 et seq.; The History of the World), is indebted to the historical outlook of the Enlightenment but points forward to Leopold von Ranke in its religious conception. In Fürstenbund (1787; “League of Princes”) and Reisen der Päpste (1782; “Travels of the Popes”), which are political journalism, Müller appears as an important theorist of the European balance of power.
Müller tried to unite the spiritual heritage of Rome with the German origins of his own civilization. The classics and Christianity went to make up this remarkably gifted personality whom German classicism—J.G. von Herder, Goethe, and Schiller—claimed as its own historian.