Albert Fraustadt

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Emil Albert Fraustadt (born December 8, 1808 in Lauchstädt , † April 7, 1883 in Dresden ) was a Protestant pastor, church historian and author.

Life

Fraustadt came from the Saxon official city of Lauchstädt, which fell to the Kingdom of Prussia through the resolutions of the Congress of Vienna . After attending school, he studied theology. In March 1834 he received the electoral certificate. After stops in Bündorf near Merseburg from 1838 and Börln near Wurzen from 1847, he became pastor in Luppa near Oschatz in 1854 , where he worked until he was 73 in 1881.

In 1872, under Albert Fraustadt, the Luppa Church was completely renovated in its original layout, the plans for it came from the builder Hugo Altendorff .

His son of the same name, Albert Fraustadt (1846–1928), was a deacon (1873) and pastor of the Church of Our Lady (Dahlen) (1874–1901). The classical philologist Georg Fraustadt (1885–1968), teacher at the Princely School in Meißen and Rector of the Princely School in Grimma , is his grandson, but he did not live to see his birth.

Albert Fraustadt became known nationwide through his publications on church history, in particular on the Merseburg monastery and on the Saxon noble family von Schönberg .

Works (selection)

  • The introduction of the Reformation in the Hochstifte Merseburg - largely based on handwritten sources , Leipzig, 1843. Accessed on February 9, 2020
  • The Keuschberg election site. A section from the prehistory of the Merseburg Monastery , Leipzig, 1858.
  • (Anonymous): The draft of a church ordinance for the Evangelical Lutherans. Church in the Kingdom of Saxony, considered by a pastor , Leipzig, 1861.
  • History of the von Schönberg family, Meißnischen tribe , 1st vol. Leipzig, 1869.
  • History of the von Schönberg family, Meißnischen tribe , 2nd vol. Leipzig, 1878.

Honors

  • Knight of the Royal Saxon Civil Merit Order

literature

  • Wilhelm Haan : Saxon writer's lexicon. Alphabetical compilation of the scholars, writers and artists currently living in the Kingdom of Saxony, along with brief biographical notes and evidence of their writings that have appeared in print , Leipzig, Robert Schaefer's Verlag, 1875, p. 80.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. https://pfarrerbuch.de/sachsen/person/-1703921001 , accessed on February 9, 2020
  2. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Government of Merseburg, 1834 , p. 80.
  3. Saxony pastors ' book
  4. Evangelical Church Luppa , accessed on February 12, 2020
  5. https://pfarrerbuch.de/sachsen/person/1927019027 , accessed on February 9, 2020
  6. Handbook of Church Statistics for the Kingdom of Saxony , 1875, p. 154.