Berthold-Gymnasium Freiburg
Berthold-Gymnasium Freiburg | |
---|---|
type of school | high school |
founding | 1250 |
address |
Hirzbergstrasse 12 |
place | Freiburg in Breisgau |
country | Baden-Württemberg |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 47 ° 59 '26 " N , 7 ° 52' 30" E |
carrier | City of Freiburg im Breisgau |
student | about 500 |
Teachers | approx. 50 |
management | Sybille Buske |
Website | www.berthold-gymnasium.de |
The Berthold-Gymnasium (short: BG ) is a humanistic high school in Freiburg im Breisgau that emerged from a Latin school mentioned in a document in 1250.
The current school building is located east of the old town on the banks of the Dreisam and is the oldest school in the city. The Latin-based language sequence English, French or Greek indicates the tradition of the Latin school and the later humanistic grammar school. The high school was named after several dukes of Zähringen .
history
In 1250 the school is mentioned for the first time as a Latin school . From 1457 the school leaving certificate of this school entitled to attend the university . In 1620 the Jesuits took over the school as a grammar school Academicum . In 1773, after the Jesuits were banned, the school was converted into a " normal school ", but remained part of the university.
In 1792 the school was spun off from the University of Freiburg . The Breisgau Benedictine monasteries were responsible for the school. In 1807 it was converted into the state “Grand Ducal Gymnasium in Freiburg”. After that it was housed in the Peterhof for some time . The school became a humanistic grammar school in 1814 . In 1904 the "Berthold-Gymnasium" was the largest humanistic grammar school in the Grand Duchy of Baden with 807 students . In the same year, the Friedrich-Gymnasium, the second humanistic grammar school in Freiburg, was founded.
During the Second World War , the school building in Bertoldstr. 41 completely destroyed in the bombing of Freiburg on November 27, 1944 . Because of the total war and the commitment of the students to work on entrenchments on the Siegfried Line, classes had been suspended since the summer vacation of 1944. Only after the end of the war, in late summer 1945, the Freiburg grammar school , which had been merged from the Berthold grammar school and the Friedrich grammar school, resumed teaching the only partially damaged building of the Friedrich-Gymnasium, but had to share it in shifts with the Droste-Hülshoff-Gymnasium , which was reserved for female students. In 1958, this phase came to an end with the construction of the new school building at Hirzbergstrasse 12 under Hans Geiges and Helmut Phleps from the municipal building department.
The relief at the main entrance, which shows Homer with three young men listening to him, comes from the Freiburg sculptor Nikolaus Röslmeir (1901–1977), who also created the new Bertoldsbrunnen . There is also a quote from Canto 6 of Homer's Iliad :
"ΑΙΕΝ ΑΡΙΣΤΕΥΕΙΝ ΚΑΙ ΥΠΕΙΡΟΧΟΝ ΕΜΜΕΝΑΙ ΑΛΛΩΝ, ΜΗΔΕ ΓΕΝΟΣ ΠΑΤΕΡΩΝ ΑΙΣΧΥΝΕΜΕΝ
(Aien aristeuein kai hypeirochon emmenai allon mede genos pateron aischynemen - German:
Always be the best and superior to others, but not disgrace the sex of the fathers)."
The building of the Berthold-Gymnasium in Hirzbergstrasse has been registered as a cultural monument since 2018.
Departments
Language education
The Berthold-Gymnasium regards Latin as the linguistic basis of humanistic education. Latin is taught as the main subject from grade 5, followed by English from grade 6. Alternatively, English can be chosen from grade 5, followed by Latin from grade 6. In the eighth grade, students choose between Ancient Greek and French or IMP.
Students who have chosen Greek can take French as a late-starting foreign language from grade 10 onwards. This gives them the opportunity to acquire the European Gymnasium certificate. The certificate proves that Latin and Greek have been taken in the intermediate level as well as a classical language in connection with a modern foreign language in the course level. Italian can be taken as a study group from grade 10 and as an optional subject in the course level.
Natural sciences and computer science
At the humanistic grammar school, language and science education complement each other. The subject association Biology, Natural Phenomena and Technology (BNT) in the 5th and 6th grades takes on a bridging function between the integrated subject teaching of the elementary school and the natural science subjects of the grammar school from grade 7. Biology, physics and chemistry lessons follow in the intermediate level. In the course level, the natural science subjects are offered in three- and five-hour courses. After the basic course in media education in class 5, the advanced course in computer science follows in class 7. This can be followed by the profile subject IMP (computer science / math / physics), which can be taken as a major from year 8 to 10. In the course level, the Berthold-Gymnasium offers the elective computer science as a two-hour subject.
Social and personalized learning
In portfolio discussions, the learners reflect on their learning and social behavior and receive regular feedback. The mentoring concept, which has been tried and tested for many years, is based on the confidentiality and binding nature of the agreements made between the student and his teacher. This supports the children and adolescents in discovering their own personal learning paths and motivates them to pursue their school goals.
The Lions-Quest program supports pupils in grades 5 to 7 to strengthen their self-confidence and communication skills, to build contacts and relationships and to develop constructive solutions to conflicts and problems of adolescents. In the weekly class council, democratic togetherness and participation are promoted. The class council offers a forum for pupils to discuss and decide on their own concerns.
The school also has a differentiated system of sponsors and student mentors in the areas of sport, media and integration. In this way students take responsibility for other students and can prove themselves in their tasks.
Aesthetic education and creativity
Aesthetic education has a high priority at the humanistic grammar school. Concerts and theater performances are highlights of the school year. In the fine arts, learners develop their creative possibilities of expression. The results are shown in permanent and temporary exhibitions in the school building.
As early as the Middle Ages, students at the Latin school in Freiburg Cathedral sang ; Committed to this tradition, the grammar school assigns a special role to the arts. The aim of music education is to develop the western music culture and to support practical musical training. Music is played in the class and in the working groups, in the choir, in the orchestra and in the big band.
Projects
- The school newspaper BACKGROUND , which has been published since 2001, came out on top in various school newspaper competitions in recent years, most recently in the competition of the federal states in 2009 in second place in the grammar school category.
- The school theater of the grammar school has existed since 1948 and has regularly performed one to three productions per school year since 1988. Works by the theater groups have received several awards:
- Winning the “ Gerhard Storz Prize” twice in 1989 for the production of “ The Wasps ” by Aristophanes and in 2003 for the production of the play “ Troilus and Cressida ” by William Shakespeare
- The 3rd prize at the theater competition of the “ Humanism Today ” foundation in November 2007 for their staging Women in the People's Assembly !!! of the Aristophanes piece The Women's People's Assembly .
- Participation in the television production Die doppelte Johanna , here the Südwestrundfunk showed in parallel the rehearsal of the Schiller drama The Jungfrau von Orléans by actors at the Stuttgart State Theater and by students from the theater group of the Berthold-Gymnasium.
Personalities
Directors
- 1822–1826 Heinrich Schreiber (1793–1872)
- 1863–1875 Wilhelm Furtwängler (1809–1875)
- 1945–1954 Max Breithaupt (1888–1965)
- 1954–1962 Joseph Klek (1895–1971)
- 1962–1975 Bertold Ruff (* 1913)
- 1975–1982 Josef Vogt (1926–2014)
- 1983–1994 Reinhard Dieterle (1932–2015)
- 1994-2005 Michael Gugel
- 2005–2013 Elisabeth Müller-Ahrem
- since 2013 Sybille Buske (* 1971)
Well-known teachers and professors
- Walther von Breisach (1256 – after 1300), minstrel, head of the Latin school ( rector puerorum )
- Ulrich Zasius (1461–1535), lawyer and humanist, head of the Latin school 1496–1499
- Josef Dominik Karl Brugger (1796–1865), teacher in Freiburg from around 1824 to 1836 and later a German Catholic priest in Heidelberg
- Anton Baumstark senior (1800–1876), classical philologist, 1826 provisional teacher
- Joseph Heinrich Garnier (1802 – around 1855), journalist and publicist, acted as a substitute for a few months
- Leonhard Schanzenbach (1852–1938)
- Karl Schaefer (1870–1942), art historian
- Leo Wohleb (1888–1955), teacher from 1920 to 1930, later President of Baden
- Ernst Ochs (1888–1961)
- Friedrich Gisinger (1888–1964)
Known students
- Johann Caspar Brenzinger (* around 1651–1737), painter and councilor of the city of Freiburg
- Martin Gerbert (1720–1793), prince abbot of the St. Blasien monastery
- Ignaz Speckle (1754–1824), last abbot of St. Peter's Monastery
- Franz Xaver Mezler (1756–1812), physician
- Franz Peter Nick (1772–1825), Catholic clergyman and university professor
- Heinrich Schreiber (1793–1872), historian, later head of the school
- Karl Joseph Beck (1794–1838), physician and university professor
- Karl Fromherz (1797–1854), pioneer of biomedicine and biochemistry
- Karl Alexander von Reichlin-Meldegg (1801–1877), theologian and philosopher
- Anselm Feuerbach (1829–1880), painter
- August Joos (1833–1909), member of the Baden Assembly of Estates, Baden Oberamtmann, President of the Baden Administrative Court, the Competence Court and the Chamber of Accounts
- Heinrich von Kageneck (1835–1887), landowner and politician
- Joseph Stöckle (1844-1893), classical philologist
- Otto Winterer (1846–1915), Lord Mayor of the cities of Constance and Freiburg
- Andreas Schill (1849–1896), theologian, from 1889 professor of apologetics
- Adolf Furtwängler (1853–1907), classical archaeologist
- Wilhelm Schmidle (1860–1951), educator, botanist and geologist
- Albert Thumb (1865–1915), linguist and neo-Greekist
- Wilhelm Herrenknecht (1865–1941), doctor, dentist and university professor
- Hermann Dischler (1866–1935), painter of Black Forest landscapes
- Georg Karo (1872–1963), classical archaeologist
- Eugen Fischer (1874–1967), physician, anthropologist and "racial hygienist" at the time of National Socialism
- Carl Schnarrenberger (1875–1964), geologist
- Heinrich Feurstein (1877–1942), Catholic priest and art historian, died in Dachau concentration camp
- Henry Hoek (1878–1951), geologist, meteorologist, mountaineer, skier and writer
- Karl Geiler (1878–1953), legal scholar and politician
- Henry Hoek (1878–1951), geologist, meteorologist, mountaineer, skier and writer
- Hermann Gehri (1879–1944), painter and university professor
- Wilhelm Winterer (1879–1969), colonial officer and Africa writer
- Wilhelm Mühe (1882–1966), German ministerial official
- Otto Ernst Sutter (1884–1970), engineer, journalist, media reporter and writer
- Hans Lembke (1885–1959), painter and drawing teacher
- Ludwig Armbruster (1886–1973), Catholic priest and apologist
- Leo Wohleb (1888–1955), President of the State of Baden , also taught here from 1920 to 1930
- Arnold Fanck (1889–1974), director, cameraman, mountain, ski, sports and nature film pioneer
- Rudolf Muchow (1889–1962), painter
- Günther Lütjens (1889–1941), naval officer and admiral
- Martin Heidegger (1889–1976), philosopher
- Wolfgang Hoffmann (1893–1956), lawyer, Lord Mayor of Freiburg im Breisgau
- Julius Bissier (1893–1965), painter
- Albert Leo Schlageter (1894–1923), volunteer corps fighter
- Josef Schelb (1894–1977), composer, pianist and music college professor
- Alfons Beil (1896–1997), Catholic priest and author
- Hermann Kopf (1901–1991), politician (CDU)
- Hanns Elard Ludin (1905–1947), SA Obergruppenführer and war criminal
- Adolf Würth (1905–198?), Anthropologist, tsiganologist and National Socialist racial theorist
- Hermann Schäufele (1906–1977), Archbishop of Freiburg
- David Daube (1909–1999), lawyer at Oxford and Berkeley (California)
- Viktor Huber von Gleichenstein (1909–1994), administrative lawyer and district administrator
- Werner Fechter (1910–1994), Germanist
- Walther Fürst (1912–2009), lawyer and President of the Federal Administrative Court (BVerwG).
- Oskar Vivell (1917–1981), doctor
- Alfred Saupe (1925–2008), physicist who did fundamental work in the field of liquid crystals
- Helmut Engler (1926–2015), lawyer and former Minister for Science and Art in Baden-Württemberg
- Alfred Erhart (1928–1984), sculptor
- Franz Gutmann (* 1928), sculptor
- Klaus Hemmerle (1929–1994), Catholic bishop
- Werner O. Feißt (1929–2006), television presenter, television journalist
- Leo Teutsch (1929–1961), ancient historian
- Hermann Fünfgeld (1931–2018), director of the Süddeutscher Rundfunk (SDR)
- Hans Maier (* 1931), political scientist and former Minister of Culture of Bavaria
- Dieter Heß (* 1933), botanist
- Benno Müller-Hill (1933–2018), biochemist, professor of genetics
- Conrad Schroeder (1933–2006), politician (CDU), BG student from 1945 to 1954, Abitur 1955 at the Theresien-Gymnasium in Munich
- Peter Horn (1934–2019), South African writer
- Clausdieter Schott (* 1936), lawyer, legal historian and professor in Zurich
- Paul-Ludwig Weinacht (* 1938), political scientist
- Wolfgang Huber (* 1942), former council chairman of the EKD
- Gundolf Fleischer (* 1943), lawyer and politician (CDU)
- Ebbo Demant (* 1943), documentary filmmaker, director, journalist and university lecturer
- Hans-Jürgen Sperling (* 1943), lawyer and university lecturer (administrative law)
- Berthold Riese (* 1944), ethnologist and archaeologist
- Thomas Zotz (* 1944), historian of medieval history
- Hans G. Nutzinger (* 1945), economist
- Hortense von Gelmini (* 1947), orchestra conductor, painter, and writer
- Wolfgang Weber (* 1950), historian
- Sabine Rollberg (* 1953), professor for artistic television formats, film and television
- Ulrich Eigler (* 1959), classical philologist
- Robert Schupp (* 1969), actor
- Max Giermann (* 1975), actor
- Vivian Hösch (* 1991), visually impaired winter athlete (Nordic skiing and biathlon)
literature
- K. Ritter and R. Thoma: Middle and elementary schools . In: Baden Architects and Engineers Association, Upper Rhine District (Ed.): Freiburg im Breisgau. The city and its buildings . HM Poppen & Sohn, Freiburg im Breisgau 1898, p. 529-534 ( Scan - Wikisource ).
- Association of former students of the Berthold-Gymnasium (Hrsg.): The Freiburg Berthold-Gymnasium 1958. Festschrift . Freiburg im Breisgau 1958.
- Josef Vogt, Erich Mayer, Bettina Wirth, Michael Gugel: Berthold-Gymnasium - 750 years of Latin school in Freiburg Festschrift , self-published, Freiburg 2000.
- Thomas Zotz , Dieter Mertens , Dieter Speck , Wolfgang Günter: Berthold-Gymnasium : The Beginnings of the Freiburg Latin School to the Foundation of the University in 1457 / The Municipal Latin School from the University's Foundation to the Transition to Baden / From the Paedagogicum Academicum to the Grand Ducal Lyceum (1572–1806 ) / The Berthold-Gymnasium between 1807 and 1958 , in: Journal of the Breisgau history association “Schau-ins-Land” . 120, 2001, pp. 145-208 ( digitized version ).
- Peter Kalchthaler : The "ship" on Bertoldstrasse , in: Badische Zeitung on June 30, 2008, accessed on January 9, 2010.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Friedrich Kempf: The chapel of the Peterhof in: Freiburg im Breisgau. The city and its buildings , HM Poppen & Sohn, Freiburg im Breisgau 1898, p. 365 .
- ↑ a b Peter Kalchthaler: Freiburg South: Harmonious in a wonderful landscape , July 28, 2008, accessed on February 6, 2010
- ↑ This quote is also the motto of various universities in the English-speaking world, such as the University of St Andrews in Scotland or Boston College in Massachusetts .
- ↑ Uwe Meves (ed.): Regesten German minnesingers of the 12th and 13th centuries . De Gruyter, Berlin, New York 2005; Regest number 12 and 14.
- ^ Friedrich Kempf: Public fountains and monuments , in: Freiburg im Breisgau. The city and its buildings , HM Poppen & Sohn, Freiburg im Breisgau 1898, 489
- ↑ Friedrich von Weech (Ed.): Badische Biographieen , Volume 1, 1875, p. 296.
- ^ Friedrich von Weech: Baumstark, Anton . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 46, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1902, pp. 260-262.
- ↑ Gerhard Kaller: Speckle, Ignaz. In: Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL). Volume 10, Bautz, Herzberg 1995, ISBN 3-88309-062-X , Sp. 894-896.
- ^ Heinrich Schreiber: Literary Freiburg in: Freyburg im Breisgau with its surroundings , Herder, Freiburg 1825, p. 388, preview in the Google book search
- ^ Wilhelm von Gümbel : Fromherz, Karl . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 8, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1878, p. 138 f.
- ^ Friedrich von Weech : Reichlin-Meldegg, Karl Alexander Freiherr von . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 27, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1888, p. 681 f.
- ^ Karl Werner : Feuerbach, Anselm . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 48, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1904, pp. 524-533.
- ↑ Georg Hirth : German Parliament Almanach, Bd .: 14, Leipzig, 1881, p. 165 ( digitized version )
- ^ Friedrich Lauchert : Schill, Andreas . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 54, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1908, p. 15 f.
- ↑ badische-zeitung.de: Hinterzarten: 100 works by Hermann Dischler can be seen , April 27, 2010, accessed on May 1, 2010
- ^ Christoph Schwingenstein: Karo, Georg. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 11, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1977, ISBN 3-428-00192-3 , p. 280 f. ( Digitized version ).
- ↑ See Eugen Fischer's biography on leo-bw.de. The "Großherzogliche Gymnasium Freiburg" mentioned there is the later so-called "Berthold-Gymnasium".
- ↑ Schnarrenberger, Carl. leo-bw.de, accessed on October 29, 2016 .
- ↑ Steffen Rückl: Ludwig Armbruster - by the National Socialists in 1934 forcibly retired apologist from the Berlin University. A documentation. No. 78/2007 Humboldt - Universität Berlin ISBN 978-3-86004-207-6 , p. 40, Annex 1.1
- ↑ Joachim S. Hohmann : Robert Ritter and the heirs of criminal biology. "Gypsy Research" in National Socialism . Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main 1991, ISBN 978-3-631-43984-5 , p. 275.
- ↑ Appreciation Leo Teutsch (PDF; 28 kB) , uni-heidelberg.de, accessed on November 28, 2013
- ↑ Vita. hhmaier.de, accessed on January 11, 2016 .
- ↑ Schroeder, Conrad. In: leo-bw.de. Retrieved December 20, 2017 .