Bismarck School (Hanover)
Bismarck School | |
---|---|
type of school | high school |
School number | 65006 |
founding | 1906 |
address |
At the Bismarck School 5 |
place | Hanover |
country | Lower Saxony |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 52 ° 21 '20 " N , 9 ° 44' 52" E |
carrier | City of Hanover |
student | 995 (as of December 15, 2011) |
Teachers | 81 (as of May 17, 2015) |
management | Heinrich Frommeyer |
Website | www.bismarckschule.de |
The Bismarck School is a high school in Hanover . It is located in the Südstadt district , in the immediate vicinity of the Maschsee . It is named after the German statesman and founder of the German Empire Otto von Bismarck .
history
The Bismarck School was founded in 1906 as a "Reform Realgymnasium ", a natural science Realgymnasium for boys.
After the building of the “Royal Maternity Hospital” was initially used, the “Provincial Midwifery School” at Herrenhäuser Kirchweg 5 in the (today's) district of Nordstadt , five years later pupils and teachers were able to move into the new Art Nouveau building , in which the Bismarck School is still located today is located. The architect of the building, which was built from 1909 to 1911 in the late Art Nouveau style, was Johann de Jonge .
During the Second World War , one of several public air raid shelters in the southern part of the city was set up in the Bismarck School to protect the people who remained in the city from the aerial bombs during the air raids on Hanover .
The Bismarck School has been a UNESCO project school since 1953 . In 2005, the application to set up an all-day school was approved.
Today's Bismarck School
A total of around 1000 students attend the Bismarck School, which is taught by over 80 teachers and eight trainee teachers in grades 5 to 12.
On September 24th, 2009 the foundation stone was laid for a new three-story building, which offers ten class and two group rooms as well as a cafeteria and a cafeteria . The new building, in which around 4.75 million euros were invested, was inaugurated on August 18, 2010 by Mayor Stephan Weil. During the construction period, most of the classrooms were in a four-part container structure in the schoolyard. An “auditorium” had also been set up here, in which the written Abitur exams were taken.
The historic main building was also modernized up to the 100th anniversary in 2011 for a further 8.25 million euros. The work was advertised and awarded by the City of Hanover as a public-private partnership .
profile
The focus of the school orientation is the mathematical and scientific profile with the establishment of corresponding specialization classes from the fifth year onwards, the establishment of "wind classes" in years 5 and 6, participation in the UNESCO school project and the school's media profile .
In the fifth and sixth grades, the students have the opportunity to learn an instrument in the "wind class". Participation is limited to two years. The students can choose from various instruments (flute, clarinet, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, trumpet, trombone, electric bass, drums, and formerly tuba and euphonium). The learning of the respective instruments takes place within the different instrument groups by individual specialists, so that the music lessons can build on the knowledge of the students. This does not take place in the conventional sense, but through “class rehearsals”.
After the seventh grade, the "wind class" is over. The pupils can then choose whether they want to continue playing their instrument in a working group, whether they take individual or small group lessons with the respective instrument teacher, or whether they stop playing their instrument altogether.
Projects
There are also projects at the Bismarck School, such as the annual fifth grade Africa week. Since 2012, the respective high school graduate class has been hosting a Harry Potter night for the fifth and sixth grades. In addition, the respective Abitur class has been hosting a winter ball for the ninth and tenth grades since 2019.
Foreign language offer
At the Bismarck School, English is taught from the fifth grade. From year 6 onwards, French, Spanish or Latin are offered as elective subjects. In addition, Italian can be chosen from the tenth grade.
Working groups and sports clubs
Various working groups are offered, such as the football, computer, hockey, school newspaper and theater group.
The rowing club Bismarckschule Hannover eV is part of the school, and with its student department it offers rowing training for the students of the Bismarckschule at the student boathouse of the city of Hannover on the Maschsee.
planetarium
The Bismarck School building houses a planetarium with a Zeiss ZKP-1 projector as well as an observatory with a Zeiss 150 mm telescope and a Celestron C8 telescope in its south tower.
Cooperation partner
The Bismarck School cooperates in the upper level with the Tellkampf School to enable a wide range of specialization electives. She also supports a partner school in Tanzania.
School newspaper
The school newspaper of the Bismarck School, which appears several times a year (formerly "BisZ", then "fussnote", today "Neuer BisZ") is produced by students. The edition is 100–300 copies.
Personalities
student
- Ferdinand Wilhelm Fricke (1863–1927), "Father and creator of Hanoverian lawn sport"
- Sigmund Meyer (1873–1935), engineer and electric car pioneer, first industrialist in the Bremen citizenship
- Albrecht Büsing (1884–1952), teacher and politician (DVP)
- Otto Haase (1893–1961), reform pedagogue
- Pascual Jordan (1902–1980), theoretical physicist and politician (NSDAP, CDU)
- Enrique Beck (actually Heinrich Beck; 1904–1974), poet and translator
- Kurt Julius (1909–1986), photographer
- Carl Bauer (1909–1999), architect
- Nicholas Kemmer (1911–1998), British theoretical physicist (nuclear physics)
- Horst Langemann (1928–2011), chemist
- Peter Grossmann (* 1933), building researcher
- Peter Glotz (1939–2005), politician (SPD), journalist and communication scientist
- Reinhard Hauff (* 1939), director and director of the Film and Television Academy, Berlin
- Jörn Köhnke (* 1940), architect
- Eberhard Neumann-Redlin von Meding (* 1941), gynecologist, Königsberg historian and musician
- Carl-Hans Hauptmeyer (* 1948), historian
- Matthias Stuhlmann (* 1953), author and autobiographer
- Jörg Ranau (* 1955), diplomat
- Cornelius Hasselblatt (* 1960), Finnougrist and translator
Teacher
- from 1913: Ernst August Büttner
- Albert Herrmann (1886–1945), geography historian
- Rudolf Wilckens (1884–1936), geologist and paleontologist, author of geography textbooks
- Kurt Felgner (1912–2002), music teacher and choir director
- Erich Grün (1915–2009), painter and graphic artist, from 1957 to 1981 art teacher
- Bernhard Ehlen (* 1939), Jesuit and founder of German Doctors
literature
- Festschrift for the 100th anniversary of the Bismarck School in Hanover , 2006
- Wolfgang Neß : Bismarck School. In: Monument topography of the Federal Republic of Germany , architectural monuments in Lower Saxony, City of Hanover, Part 1, [Bd.] 10.1 , ed. by Hans-Herbert Möller, ISBN 3-528-06203-7 , p. 119, as well as the Südstadt appendix . In: List of architectural monuments according to § 4 (NDSchG) (except for architectural monuments of the archaeological monument preservation), status July 1, 1985, City of Hanover , Lower Saxony State Administration Office - Institute for Monument Preservation , p.
- Hans Kammel: Bismarck School. In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (eds.) U. a .: City Lexicon Hanover . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9 , p. 68.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ A b Hans Kammel: Bismarck School. In: Stadtlexikon Hannover , p. 68
- ^ Rainer Kasties MA: Maternity and Midwifery School. In: Stadtlexikon Hannover , p. 161
- ↑ Hans Joachim Toll : "If it had hit us ..." , in this: The night before the day without the sun. A documentary report on the life and death of the city of Hanover , reprint of the documentary report, published in the Hannoversche Presse, Hanover: Hannoversche Druck- und Verlagsgesellschaft, [1953], p. 6f.
- ↑ www.hannover-entzüge.de ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. - Bismarck School: Lord Mayor inaugurates three-story extension building
- ↑ Bärbel Hilbig: Gymnasium gets an extension. Start at the Bismarck School. In: Hannoversche Allgemeine Zeitung of September 25, 2009, page 14
- ^ Heinrich Baxmann: Hufflepuff wins the house cup for the third time. In: Website of the Bismarck School. Retrieved February 9, 2018 .
- ↑ Dirk Böttcher : Fricke, (1) Wilhelm. In: Stadtlexikon Hannover , pp. 191f.
- ↑ Hans Christoph Graf von Seherr-Thoß: Meyer, Sigmund (called Hans Sigismund). In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 17, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1994, ISBN 3-428-00198-2 , p. 373 f. ( Digitized version ).
- ↑ Compare the obituary : Ernst Büttner †. In: Niedersächsisches Jahrbuch für Landesgeschichte , Vol. 28: Hildesheim: Lax, 1956, p. 343; Preview over google books