Bernhard Heinrich von der Hude (clergyman, 1765)

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Bernhard Heinrich von der Hude, drawing by Friedrich Carl Gröger , 1795

Bernhard Heinrich von der Hude , also Bernhard Hinrich von der Hude (born June 8, 1765 in Lübeck ; † December 26, 1828 ibid) was a German Evangelical Lutheran clergyman and chief pastor at St. Marien zu Lübeck. He was the third bearer of this name in a row in this office.

Life

Wehde 8, destroyed in 1942

Bernhard Heinrich von der Hude was the son of (Bernhard) Hinrich von der Hude (1731–1795) , senior pastor and senior of the ministry , and his wife Maria Elisabeth, née. Woldt. After visiting the Katharineum in Lübeck , he studied Protestant theology at the University of Jena from 1785 , where his studbook from his student days has been preserved in the city ​​museum ; Friedrich Wilhelm Trendelenburg and Adolph Heinrich Voeg are among the Lübeck fellow students who signed the book in Jena . On November 6, 1794, he was called to be his father's preacher and special colleague at St. Mary's and on November 13, 1800, he was promoted to senior pastor. He lived in the middle house of the Wehde , Marien Quartier 6 , today Mengstrasse 8.

Von der Hude was shaped by the ideas of the Enlightenment . At the beginning of his term of office there were significant changes in the liturgy and church music of the Marienkirche, such as the end of the cantorate in 1802. He campaigned for various social and educational projects.

A lecture he on 24 February 1801 before the Society for the promotion of community service over the benefits of a savings bank for servants and like people from lower classes held, the impetus for the formation of a committee that eventually 1817 establishing the Sparkasse zu Lübeck led . From 1821 to 1825 he was director of the company.

In 1804, together with the preacher Hermann Friedrich Behn, he was one of the founders of the daughter's school , which was housed in the former superintendent's office, which had been vacant since Johann Adolph Schinmeier's death, in the inner courtyard of the Wehde and which later became the Ernestinian school . Hude wrote a small German language lesson for the school , which had four editions by 1822.

He was married to Margarethe Henriette, born in 1795. Heyn (1776-1819). The couple's sons Heinrich von der Hude (1798–1853) and Hermann von der Hude (1811–1858) became senators of the Hanseatic city of Lübeck. The daughter Henriette (1809–1843) married Carl Wilhelm Asher .

Two miniature drawings by Bernhard Heinrich and Margarethe Henriette von der Hude, probably made for the wedding by Friedrich Carl Gröger , have been preserved as a museum in Lübeck.

Works

  • Small German language teaching initially for daughter schools: with an appendix of incorrect essays to help you apply the given rules correctly. Lübeck: Niemann 1808
Small German language lessons, initially for daughters and community schools. With an appendix of incorrect articles, the correct application of the given rules and the avoidance of the spelling and language errors common in northern Germany. 3., all over again. Edition - Lübeck: Riemann, 1819
Small German language lessons, initially for daughters and community schools. With an appendix of erroneous essays, the correct application of the given rules and the avoidance of common spelling and language errors. 4., all over again. Edition - Lübeck: von Rhoden, 1822
  • Holy speech, given at the altar on October 19, 1814. Lübeck: Borchers 1814
  • Brief outline of the history of the Reformation up to the Peace of Augsburg. Lübeck: GB Niemann 1817
Digitized copy of the copy from the Bavarian State Library
  • History of the Society for the Promotion of Charitable Activities in Lübeck from 1789-1824. Lübeck: von Rohden 1825

Individual evidence

  1. Signature: St. 1, 13; Duration: 1786–1789
  2. Joachim Blankenburg / Birgitt Hellmann: The library collection of the Jena City Museum - collection history, provenances and entries. In: Einst und Jetzt 53 (2008), pp. 237–270, here pp. 264–267
  3. M. Funk: Some notes about the official residences of the clergy in Lübeck . In: Zeitschrift des Verein für Lübeckische Geschichte und Altertumskunde 4 (1884), pp. 68–83, here p. 71
  4. ^ Ludwig Heller: History of the Lübeck Society for the promotion of charitable activities. Lübeck: Rohden 1837 ( digitized version ), p. 184
  5. ^ Emil Ferdinand Fehling : On the Lübeck Council Line 1814-1914. Max Schmidt, Lübeck 1915, Nos. 51 and 56. Commons digitized .
  6. ^ Peter Vignau-Wilberg: The painter Friedrich Carl Gröger. Neumünster: Wachholtz 1971 (Studies on Schleswig-Holstein Art History, Volume 11), No. 20 and 21, pp. 50f