Annenschule (Dresden)
The Dresden Annenschule , later known as the Annen Realschule , Annen Realgymnasium , or Annen Gymnasium Dresden in the 19th and 20th centuries, was founded in 1563 by the Dresden Council. First established as a school in the Bartholomäus Hospital , it became a choir school from 1600 and a Latin school from 1619 . The school experienced its first heyday under its principal Christian August Freyberg , who took over the office in December 1719. Already in 1724 the school became the Lyceum collected and was the third high school in Dresden. A third teaching position was approved three years later after the number of students had risen continuously.
At first the school was near the Church of St. Anne . In 1870 she moved to the newly built schoolhouse southeast of the church, which had been built in the Renaissance style according to the plan of the city building officer Theodor Friedrich . The interior of the school was decorated with frescoes by Alfred Diethe . The Bendemann pupil Diethe received the contract after winning a competition from the Saxon Art Association . The subjects as a civic educational program were: 1. Luther's posting of the theses , 2. Artists and scholars at the Medici court , 3. The discovery of America , 4. The cultivation and trade by father August and mother Anna . The themes are reminiscent of the early bourgeois boom, humanism and the Reformation in Saxony.
In 1936 the school was integrated into the upper secondary school in Seevorstadt .
The school building was badly damaged during the air raids on Dresden in February 1945; the ruins were still standing in the 1950s.
After the facility closed in 2002, the Annen Campus site was taken over by the new Dresden International School .
In front of the school there is a life-size bronze sculpture group "Drawing Children" by Hans Klakow from 1961. Two boys are shown, originally a girl belonged to the group, the group of children was cast several times.
Known students
personality | Life dates | Source and Notes |
---|---|---|
Emil Peschel | 1835-1912 | Historian, linguist, museum director, councilor and biographer Theodor Körners |
Georg Helm | 1851-1923 | mathematician |
Louis Brandeis | 1856-1941 | First Jewish judge on the United States Supreme Court , after which today's Brandeis University was named. He attended the Annenschule 1873-1875. |
Georg Irrgang | 1860-1939 | Writer who wrote opera texts for Karl Grammann and for decades editor of the Dresdner Anzeiger |
Richard Seyfert | 1862-1940 | Pedagogue and German politician ( National Liberal Party , DDP ). He attended the Annenschule 1872-1875. |
Heinrich August Meißner | 1862-1940 | German engineer and railway builder, pasha in the Ottoman Empire from 1904 |
Alfred Meiche | 1870-1947 | Historian, folklorist and linguist |
Arnold Schering | 1877-1941 | Musicologist |
Rudolf Kühn | 1886-1950 | Architect and construction officer, city planning officer of Altenburg , Forst and Breslau |
Paul Ssymank | 1874-1942 | High school teacher, student historian |
Max Richter | 1887-1988 | Politician ( German People's Party ), Member of the Reichstag, Council of State for Thuringia ( Altenburg ) |
Wilibald Gurlitt | 1889-1963 | Musicologist |
Fritz Reuter | 1896-1963 | Composer, musicologist and teacher |
Hermann hiking check | 1907-1971 | Editor and advisor in the Reich Ministry for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda , theater critic and playwright |
Horst Peschel | 1909-1989 | Full professor for spheroidal and physical geodesy at the Technical University of Dresden , President of the Chamber of Technology |
Wilhelm Vaillant | 1909-1993 | Electrical engineer, entrepreneur, doctor and philanthropist |
Wolfgang Böhme | 1926-2012 | Meteorologist. He attended the Annenschule 1936-1944. |
Katja Kipping | * 1978 | Politician ( Die Linke ) |
Web links
- Drawing of the Annenschule around 1840 (with the Annenkirche in the background) in the Deutsche Fotothek
Individual evidence
- ↑ Meyers Konversationslexikon. "Dresden (suburbs; population, industry and trade)" Verlag des Bibliographisches Institut, Leipzig and Vienna, fourth edition, 1885–1892. S. 144. (online)
- ↑ Annual reports for 1864 to 1874 and files of the Sächsischer Kunstverein No. 187, p. 180, 185ff., Quoted from KÖHLER, Brunhilde: Geschichte des sächsische Kunstverein (1828–1946, Dresden 1994, p. 34)
- ↑ Dresden travel guide - Wilsdruffer Vorstadt
- ^ Art in public space . Information brochure of the state capital Dresden, December 1996.
- ↑ CV from the Alumni Project of the TU Dresden
- ↑ Elinor Slater, Robert O. Slater: Great Jewish Men . Jonathan David Publishers, 1996, ISBN 0-8246-0381-8 , pp. 70 ( excerpt from Google book search [accessed October 21, 2010]).
- ↑ Helga Keppeler-Schrimpf: Education is only possible on the basis of nationality. In: Pedagogy and Current Affairs . tape 5 . Lit, Münster 2005, ISBN 3-8258-6537-1 , p. 386 ( limited preview in Google Book Search [accessed October 21, 2010]).
- ^ Renate Huebner-Hinderling: SCHERING, Arnold. In: Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL). Volume 9, Bautz, Herzberg 1995, ISBN 3-88309-058-1 , Sp. 165-166.
- ↑ Jens Lipsdorf : Leave a lot of traces in Forst. In: Lausitzer Rundschau. June 29, 2006, accessed October 16, 2012 .
- ↑ Curriculum vitae from the Walcker Orgel web portal: "Organisten" p. 4 (PDF; 29 kB) ( Memento from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Entry on Fritz Reuter in the Catalogus Professorum Halensis (accessed on July 28, 2015)
- ↑ A brief overview of the (so far) most important stations (Katja Kipping, Member of the Left Group)
Coordinates: 51 ° 2 ′ 58.7 " N , 13 ° 43 ′ 44.5" E