Adolf Aisch

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Hermann Adolf Wilhelm Aisch (born April 7, 1867 in Cottbus , Brandenburg, † December 19, 1954 in Tündern near Hameln , Lower Saxony) was a German Protestant pastor and local history writer .

Life

At the Trinitatis Church in Gablenz, Aisch had his first own pastoral position.
Aisch worked at the Kreuzkirche in Weißwasser for 18 years.

Aisch was the eldest son of the royal Prussian forest treasurer Adolf Aisch († 1882) and his wife Marie, nee. Linden tree. He attended elementary school in Müllrose and high school in Frankfurt (Oder) . After receiving his Abitur on August 31, 1887, he studied theology , first in Greifswald , later in Breslau , where he also took the two theological exams.

He was at the beginning of 1895 preacher in Lietzen but (Kreis Lebus) was already on April 1 for a year as a teaching vikar to Superintendent Friedrich Rohkohl by Werner village in the Giant Mountains . This was followed by ordination in Breslau on March 31, 1896, a position as parish vicar in the Upper Silesian town of Cosel and on October 1, 1897 in Schreiberhau in the Giant Mountains .

On November 20, 1898, Adolf Aisch took up the post of deacon and second pastor in Zibelle near Muskau. Here he married Marie Elisabeth Rohkohl, daughter of the superintendent Rohkohl, on July 12, 1899. On December 1, 1901, he was appointed by Zibelle to the parish of Gablenz to the west to fill the vacant pastor's position. On May 19, 1903, Aisch joined the Upper Lusatian Society of Sciences . On the occasion of the 150-year consecration of the parish in Gablenz, Aisch published a chronicle about the parish of Gablenz in 1909. With quotes from the contemporary handwritten chronicle of long-time pastor Peter Friedrich Halke (1761–1833, pastor in Gablenz since 1786), he gave a wider readership an insight into the difficult times of troop moves in 1812 ( Russian campaign ) and 1813 ( wars of liberation ).

In 1916 he moved to the neighboring Weißwasser , where he worked as a pastor at the Kreuzkirche until 1934. The first renovation of the building erected in 1892/1893 took place at this time.

Adolf Aisch spent his old age in Tündern, Lower Saxony, near Hameln, with his daughter Katharina Gottliebe Maria Martina, who was born in 1908, known as Käthe, the wife of Tündern pastor Gerhard Wilczek. He died on December 19, 1954 at the age of 87 and was buried in Tündern.

There is no longer a burial in the cemetery there.

Works

  • Adolf Aisch: History of the Protestant Parish Gablenz O.-L. Görlitz 1909 ( digital version of the SLUB Dresden as PDF, 40 MB).
  • Adolf Aisch: The Muskau Rifle Guild . Festschrift on the occasion of its 400th anniversary. Muskau 1911.

Dependent publications:

  • Three documents from 1463 concerning the Viereichische Heide. In: New Lusatian Magazine . Volume 83, Görlitz 1907.
  • Brief outline of the history of Muskau. In: Address book of Muskau-Weißwasser. Publishing house by Emil Hampel, Weißwasser 1908.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Adolf Aisch: History of the Protestant parish Gablenz O.-L. Görlitz 1909, p. 44 .
  2. Richard Jecht : Brief guide through the history of the Upper Lusatian Society of Sciences in Görlitz from 1779–1904 . Written for the 125th Foundation Festival. Görlitzer Nachrichten und Anzeiger, Görlitz 1904, p. 27 .
  3. ^ Find: Gablenz O / L. (PDF; 18 KB) Copy: Upper Lusatian Municipality ABC. (Series of articles in “ Die Kirche ”, 1950 to 1952). Retrieved January 31, 2015 .
  4. ^ Gerd Gräber: Pastor Müller the longest in Weißwasser. History of the Evangelical Church and its Congregation / Part 15 and conclusion. (No longer available online.) Lausitzer Rundschau , Lokal-Rundschau for Weißwasser and Niesky, March 11, 2010, archived from the original on March 4, 2016 ; accessed on January 31, 2015 .
  5. 125 years of the Evangelical Church Community in Weißwasser. March 16, 2014, accessed January 31, 2015 .
  6. Information from the Hameln City Archives with reference to the Tündern death register 15/1954 and the obituary in the Deister and Weser newspaper of December 20, 1954, p. 9.