Carl Friedrich Haug (historian)

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Carl Friedrich Haug

Carl Christoph Friedrich Ludwig Haug (born January 21, 1795 in Stuttgart , Duchy of Württemberg ; † March 11, 1869 in Tübingen , Kingdom of Württemberg ) was a German Evangelical Lutheran theologian and historian . Haug held the chair for universal history at the Eberhard Karls University in Tübingen and taught this subject for almost 40 years. In the 39th year of his professorship, he asked for his retirement for health reasons .

Origin and family

Carl Friedrich Haug was the eldest son of the Württemberg " Hofmechanikus " and later professor for mechanics and engineering at the United Real and Trade School in Stuttgart Gottlob Friedrich Haug (1769–1850) and Juliane Luise Märklin (born February 12, 1774 in Stuttgart; † May 27, 1823 in Stuttgart). He is a grandson of the Ludwigsburg court instrument maker Johann Friedrich Haug (1730–1793) and his second wife Charlotte Katharina Sidonie Commerell, the daughter of the ducal chamber musician Johann Friedrich Commerell, who was born on February 24, 1734 in Ludwigsburg. Haug has numerous ancestors from Württemberg honorableness . He is also a descendant of the reformer Johannes Brenz . Haug had twelve younger siblings.

I. Marriage to Charlotte Reuss

Old town of Tübingen , the so-called upper town with old buildings of the university and the professors, the Protestant monastery in the top left in the picture, on the right the Burse , the oldest university building

Carl Friedrich Haug was first married to Johanne Charlotte Reuß, a granddaughter of the Tübingen mayor Johann Immanuel Bossert . The marriage was concluded on October 7, 1823 and ended on December 20, 1828 with the death of 24-year-old Charlotte, after giving birth the day before to a girl who had died the same day.

genealogy

Karl von Riecke on a portrait photo from History of the City of Stuttgart , published by the historian Julius von Hartmann, Stuttgart 1905

In the text: Family stories from the estate of Carl Friedrich Haug , edited by Karl Riecke, in addition to Haug's picture , there are also 5 family tables of his ancestors .

contents

attachment

  • Family Tables , pp. 97-107

Register of persons

  • P. 108

Important Wuerttemberg ancestors Haugs

II. Haug's marriage to Theophanie Conradi

The first building of the Stuttgart train station , built in 1847 , the arcades delimiting the station entrance from Schloßstraße, on a picture from around 1850. The street front of the former Palais Conradi can be seen on the far left. Luise Conradi (1780–1861), the widow of Leopold Conradi (1776–1839), citizen of Stuttgart , lived in this property until her death. After her death, the palace fell victim to the expansion of the Stuttgart train station. The global indigo trade was carried out from this property by the merchant Leopold Conradi. The trading company was founded by Luise Conradis' brother Carl Willibald Feuerlein , who died young , son of Carl Friedrich Feuerlein, a councilor and secret cabinet secretary of Duke Carl Eugen
Haug's second wife Theophanie Conradi in a youth portrait

Carl Friedrich Haug married for the second time on February 2, 1833. He married Theophanie Conradi in Stuttgart (born June 12, 1811 in Stuttgart, † August 4, 1891 in Tübingen). She was the sixth daughter and the seventh child of the Stuttgart merchant Johann Nepomuk Leopold Friedrich Conradi and Wilhelmine Auguste Luise Feuerlein. Carl Friedrich Haug's marriage to Theophanie Conradi resulted in nine daughters and one son: Charlotte, Theophanie, Luise, Carl, Mathilde, Marie, Sophie, Helene, Amalie and Anna.

The Württemberg Family Foundations XXII. Heft, Köhler, Stuttgart 1858

  • See also: Ferdinand Friedrich Faber. Family foundations In addition to genealogical news about families entitled to the same . The Württemberg Family Foundations XXII. Heft, Köhler, Stuttgart 1858 [2]

Karl Viktor von Riecke's font as a facsimile from the holdings of the Library of Princeton University

  • See also: digitized by Google as a facsimile from the holdings of the " Library of Princeton University ", the font Karl Viktor von Rieckes " Altwirtembergisches. From. Family papers. For the best. Of Lutherstift, an educational institution for pastors' sons. Published by. Karl Riecke. With the picture by Karl Friedrich Haug. Stuttgart. Printed and published by W. Kohlhammer. 1886. " [3]

Haug's sons-in-law include Oskar von Bülow , Wilhelm Roser , and Karl Riecke . Riecke published the genealogical and biographical data of his father-in-law Haug in the memorial Altwirtembergisches from family papers by Carl Friedrich Haug , published in 1886, as a private print of the family. The puppeteer and puppet maker Albrecht Roser is one of Haug 's better-known direct descendants ; he is one of Haug's great-great-grandchildren, and from the next generation, the sound artist and composer of radio plays and film music, David Moufang . The archaeologist Ferdinand Haug is a nephew of Carl Friedrich Haug.

Carl Friedrich Haug found his final resting place in the Tübingen city cemetery in Department F (row 13, grave 21). In addition to other family members, his widow Theophanie Haug née Conradi (1891) and his daughter Sophie Bülow née Haug (1937) were buried in the family grave. The grave still existed in 1985. From 1968 to 2001 the city cemetery was temporarily closed for further occupancy. The grave complex is no longer included in the photo documentation carried out by the cemetery administration in 2001.

Live and act

Sophie Friederike Haug (September 4, 1843 - June 24, 1937), the sixth daughter of Carl Friedrich Haug from his marriage to Theophanie Conradi, on a photograph by Friedrich Brandseph (around 1862)
Emil Elben , (born August 11, 1795 - † October 9, 1873) editor of the Swabian Mercury, a brother-in-law of Haug and his lifelong friend, photo by Friedrich Brandseph (around 1862)

Theological training - Denkendorf - Maulbronn - Tübingen

Carl Friedrich Haug attended the Stuttgart Illustre grammar school , which had been a training course at the Eberhard Ludwigs grammar school in Stuttgart since 1686. In the autumn of 1808, Haug had to leave his parents' house at the age of 13 after passing the state examination in order to begin a theological training at the Evangelical-theological seminars in Denkendorf and Maulbronn, in accordance with his father's wish . Following his four-year preparation in the seminars in Denkendorf and Maulbronn, Carl Friedrich Haug was a pupil of the theological monastery in Tübingen from October 1812 to spring 1817 . On September 21, 1817, after a successful disputation , he obtained the academic degree of a master's degree .

Karl von Cleß - Karl Pfaff - Friedrich von Römer

During this time Haug made lifelong friendships with Karl von Cleß ; Emil Elben, his future brother-in-law and editor of the Swabian Merkur ; the namesake Haug, who was last pastor in Degerschlacht ; Karl Pfaff , the Swabian historian, and Friedrich Römer , the Württemberg March Minister .

Hofmeister to the sons of the Danish Chamberlain von Buchwaldt

After Carl Friedrich Haug had successfully delivered his final sermon in Stuttgart on June 6, 1817 , he accepted the position of court master with the sons of the Danish chamberlain Buchwaldt in Seedorf in Holstein for two years .

On July 11, 1817, Haug set out on a journey to Holstein . His path took him via Neustadt and Gundelsheim , mostly on foot, to Heidelberg . There he visited Heinrich Paulus . On June 17, Haug reached Frankfurt am Main via Darmstadt . Frankfurt was the first major city that Haug got to know. He writes about it: "Of everything I have seen since then, I do not set anything about this city". From Frankfurt Haug's journey continued by carriage via Marburg and Kassel to Göttingen , where he visited fellow countrymen, the librarian Reuss , the church historian Planck and the theologian Karl Friedrich Staudlin . From Braunschweig , Haug took the post car to Hamburg and from there on June 29, 1817, after a journey of 18 days, to the place of his intended purpose, the estate of Chamberlain Buchwaldt's family in Seedorf .

Repetentenstelle Evangelisches Stift Tübingen - Habilitation and chair for universal history

In 1819 Carl Friedrich Haug was appointed to a repetition position at the Protestant seminary in Tübingen. After his habilitation, Haug was appointed associate professor in 1821, and in 1829 as full professor at the chair for universal history at the University of Tübingen, which he held for 39 years until his retirement in 1860.

In 1822 there was a scandal because Carl Friedrich Haug, in his lecture series on universal history, presented Protestantism as superior to Catholicism , which led to the fact that students of the Catholic Wilhelmsstift were exempted from parts of Haug's lecture that semester. After continuous complaints from the Wilhelmsstift student body and a new procedure in 1826 that remained without sanctions, the Wilhelmsstift took Haug's 1831 lecture entirely out of its students' curriculum.

In the academic year 1850/1851 Carl Friedrich Haug was rector of the University of Tübingen.

Publications (selection)

Original cover 1869. Carl Friedrich Haug. Communications from his life and his estate , printed as a manuscript for relatives and friends. Stuttgart. Printed by IB Metzler'schen Buchdruckerei. 1869. Edited by Karl Riecke
Frontispiece and title page from family stories from the estate of Carl Friedrich Haug, edited by Karl Riecke . Proverbs Solomonis 10: 7. With the picture of Haug and 5 family tables. Stuttgart. Printed and published by W. Kohlhammer. 1886.

literature

Eberhard E. von Georgii-Georgenau. Biographical-genealogical sheets. From and about Swabia . Printed and published by Emil Müller, Stuttgart 1879. In addition to other ancestors of Karl Friedrich Haug, EE von Georgii-Georgenau's work includes the biographies of the Andreae families, p. 1 f., Bengel, p. 42 f., Brenz, P. 72 f., Eisenmenger, P. 152 f., Etc. , recorded.

  • Carl Friedrich Haug. Messages from his life and from his estate. Printed as a manuscript for relatives and friends . Metzler, Stuttgart 1869 ( digitized version ).
  • Karl August KlüpfelHaug, Karl Friedrich . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 11, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1880, pp. 52-54.
  • Karl Riecke : Altwirtembergisches from family papers for the benefit of the Luther Foundation, an educational institution for pastors' sons . With the picture by Carl Friedrich Haug. W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1886, pp. 18-21 ( digitized version ).
  • Karl Riecke: Family stories from the estate of Carl Friedrich Haug . With the picture of Haug and 5 family tables. W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1886.

Web links

Commons : Carl Friedrich Haug  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c d Karl August Klüpfel:  Haug, Karl Friedrich . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 11, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1880, pp. 52-54.
  2. ^ Ferdinand Friedrich Faber: The Württemberg family foundations. (= The Württemberg Family Foundations. XXII. Issue). Köhler, Stuttgart 1858. ( digitized versionhttp: //vorlage_digitalisat.test/1%3Dhttps%3A%2F%2Farchive.org%2Fstream%2Fbub_gb_ZM1GAAAAcAAJ%23page%2Fn509%2Fmode%2F2up~GB%3D~IA%3D~MDZ~%3D%0A~ .SZ%3DZ~%3D%0A~ .SZ%3DZ double-sided% 3D ~ LT% 3D ~ PUR% 3D )
  3. Carl Friedrich Haug. Communications from his life and his estate, printed as a manuscript for relatives and friends. Stuttgart. Printed by IB Metzler'schen Buchdruckerei. 1869. Edited by Karl von Riecke
  4. See Ferdinand Friedrich Faber: The Württemberg Family Foundations XXII. Heft, Köhler, Stuttgart 1858, p. 113 [1] .
  5. quoted from: Carl Friedrich Haug Mittheilungen from his life and his estate . Stuttgart. Printing by Metzler'schen Buchdruckerei. 1869: "She was the bequeathed daughter of the town clerk Johann Conrad Gottlob Reuss, who died in Neckarsulm in 1811 , and after the death of her mother Elisabethe Rosine in Tübingen with her grandmother, Mayor Bossert , had a new one Home found ".
  6. Carl Friedrich Haug messages from his life ...
  7. GEDBAS: Ancestors of Georg Balthasar RAITH. In: gedbas.genealogy.net. Retrieved January 9, 2015 .
  8. ↑ First parents Konrad Zeller, citizen from Martinszell, stonemason and well-known master builder, married to Elisabeth Loscher Martinszell: A journey into the history of the Zeller family. In: martinszeller-verband.de. Retrieved January 9, 2015 .
  9. ^ Peter Huber: Johannes Mährlen - visionary in times of change , Hohenheim Verlag, Stuttgart - Leipzig, 2008. ISBN 978-3-89850-161-3
  10. a b Feuerlein family association: Tribe Conradi. In: Familienverband-feuerlein.de. Retrieved January 9, 2015 .
  11. 1878 Sale of the Louisenthal paper factory to the government architect Carl Friedrich Haug History of Louisenthal. In: louisenthal.de. Retrieved January 9, 2015 .
  12. ^ Family association Feuerlein: Stamm Vischer. In: Familienverband-feuerlein.de. Retrieved January 9, 2015 .
  13. Retrieved on January 16, 2015, Tübingen City Archives, Haaggasse 2, with the kind information of Ms. Antje Zacharias.
  14. Curriculum vitae, significant encounters and friendships, mentioned in the previous three sections, are reproduced from Chapter I, pp. 2–3, from: Carl Friedrich Haug. Communications from his life and personal papers , printed in manuscript for relatives and friends. Stuttgart. Printed by IB Metzler'schen Buchdruckerei. 1869.
  15. ^ Werner Gross: The Wilhelmsstift Tübingen 1817–1869. Theological training in the field of tension between state and church , Franz Steiner Verlag, Wiesbaden 1984, ISBN 3-16-444823-6 , p. 91 f., 279.