Roland Abramczyk

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Roland Ludwig Adolf Abramczyk (born January 27, 1880 in Treuen ; died 1938 ) was a German writer , poet and teacher.

Life

Abramczyk came from the Saxon Vogtland where he was born as the son of a businessman and factory owner. From 1893 he attended high school in Treuen. In 1898 he went to the University of Leipzig to study modern languages, German and literature . At the end of his studies he moved to the University of Berlin , where he became a Dr. phil. PhD. The subject of his dissertation was "The Sources for Walter Scott's Novel 'Ivanhoe'".

During his time in Berlin, Roland Abramczyk joined a group of men who wanted to follow a monistic-pantheistic cultural religion under the name “New Community”. He felt particularly drawn to Gustav Landauer , Julius Hart and Bruno Wille , who influenced his further development. After studying in Berlin, he first settled in Warsaw , Poland , where he was employed as a tutor for a year. He was drawn back to Berlin. In the summer of 1904, near the big city, he got a job as a teacher in the local education department in Bernau near Berlin . After two years he went back to Berlin and in 1907 he became a scientific teacher at the secondary school in Oranienburg . In 1908 he passed his senior teacher examination. Roland Abramczyk completed his seminar year at the Viktoria-Luisen-Schule in Berlin-Wilmersdorf . In 1909 he was employed as a senior teacher at this school. At Easter 1912, at the beginning of the school year, he moved to the Hessian city of Eschwege as director of the municipal girls' high school . In 1928 he was director of studies in Wittstock and in 1930 in Bad Freienwalde .

Works (selection)

  • My holy spring (poems), 1903.
  • About the sources for Walter Scott's novel "Ivanhoe" , Kreipohm, 1903.
  • Juvenile court as it should be , in: Vossische Zeitung of February 26, 1928.

literature

  • Franz Brümmer : Lexicon of German poets and prose writers from the beginning of the 19th century to the present . Volume 1. Brockhaus, Leipzig 1913, p. 24f.
  • Hans-Gert Roloff: Die Deutsche Literatur: Die Deutsche Literatur from 1890 to 1990 , 1991, p. 69.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kürschner's German Literature Calendar , 1930, p. 1.