Bruno Schulz (architect)

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Karl Richard Bruno Schulz (born February 24, 1865 in Friedeberg , Neumark , † April 1, 1932 in Berlin ) was a German architect , Prussian construction clerk , building researcher and university professor .

Life

During his studies he became a member of the Academic Association Motiv . Bruno Schulz was appointed government architect ( assessor in public construction) in 1893 and worked in the technical office of the building construction department of the Prussian Ministry of Public Works in Berlin until 1900 . In 1897/98 he accompanied Friedrich Sarre on a research trip through Persia and Mesopotamia . In 1899 and 1900 he was responsible for recording and examining the church buildings on the island of Torcello near Venice . From 1900 to 1904 he led the German excavations in Baalbek with Otto Puchstein . In 1903 he was promoted to agricultural inspector .

In 1904 Schulz was appointed professor for the theory of forms in ancient architecture and the Renaissance at the Technical University of Hanover . In 1912 he moved to the Technical University (Berlin-) Charlottenburg as a professor of architecture . In 1914 Schulz was appointed a secret councilor. In 1922 the Technical University of Hanover awarded him an honorary doctorate (Dr.-Ing. E. h.).

Fonts

literature

  • Hans Rotermund: The faculty of the Technical University of Hanover, 1831-1956 Hanover 1956, p. 97.
  • Willibald Reichertz: East Germans as lecturers at the Technical University of Hanover (1831–1956). In: Ostdeutsche Familienkunde 55, 2007, pp. 109–120.

Individual evidence

  1. The Black Ring. Membership directory. Darmstadt 1930, p. 39.

Web links