Carl Friedrich Heiberg

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carl Friedrich Heiberg (born October 29, 1796 in Klensby near Moldenit , † August 16, 1872 in Schleswig ) was a German lawyer , politician and book and music dealer .

Life

Born as the illegitimate son of Friedrich Ludwig Schröder and his foster daughter Anna Maria von Schwarzenfeld (around 1771–1846), Heiberg studied law , aesthetics and philosophy in Kiel , Berlin and Heidelberg after attending the cathedral school in Schleswig . During his studies in 1817 he became a member of the Old Kiel Burschenschaft . Together with Wilhelm Olshausen , he wrote poems for the Wartburg Festival (1817). After taking his legal exam in Kiel in 1821, he worked as a junior lawyer in 1825 and as a notary from 1830 . In 1830 he campaigned for a more liberal constitution together with Theodor Olshausen , among others . In 1830 he was in Rostock for Dr. iur. PhD . From 1835 to 1840 he worked as an editor for the Schleswig-Holstein papers . In 1839 he was chairman of the Schleswig Choral Society . In 1839 he wrote a font in which he supported the blue-white-red colors as the national colors for Schleswig-Holstein ; they were the colors of the flag of the Schleswig Choral Society . In 1842 he became a higher and regional court advocate and founded the Schleswig-Holsteinisch-Lauenburg Advocate Association . From 1848 to 1851 he was a member of the Schleswig-Holstein State Assembly , where he belonged to the left and campaigned for the end of the personal union with Denmark . He was active as a journalist and among other things worked for the Brockhaus Lexicon . After Schleswig-Holstein's attempts for independence had failed in 1852 , he was no longer allowed to work as a lawyer and notary due to his political activities , which was recorded in the patent for the Duchy of Schleswig regarding the amnesty . In 1857 he founded a book and music store, which was repeatedly closed by the authorities due to his further political activities. It wasn't until 1864 that he was allowed to work again as an appellate attorney and notary. Politically, he joined the Liberals and in 1865 became a member of the select committee of the Schleswig-Holstein associations.

On September 17, 1835, he married Asta Heiberg in Schleswig . “They founded the family dynasty of the Heibergs, which was to produce numerous important personalities in the subsequent period.” Together they moved into the house in Schleswig at today's Stadtweg 39. In total, the marriage resulted in three sons and one daughter. His son Hermann Heiberg was a writer, his son Julius Heiberg was mayor of Schleswig.

Publications

  • The right to participate in the constitution in Schleswig-Holstein, a historical and constitutional discussion. Schleswig 1831.
  • Schleswig-Holstein's coat of arms, flags, etc. Colours. Schleswig 1845.

literature

  • Helge Dvorak: Biographical Lexicon of the German Burschenschaft. Volume I: Politicians. Sub-Volume 2: F-H. Winter, Heidelberg 1999, ISBN 3-8253-0809-X , pp. 273-274.

Individual evidence

  1. Ulrike Krone-Balcke: Schröder, Friedrich Ludwig. In: New German Biography . 23, 2007, pp. 555–556 ( online version )
  2. Eduard Alberti (ed.): Lexicon of Schleswig-Holstein-Lauenburg and Eutinian writers from 1829 to mid-1866 . Maack, Kiel 1867, p. 339.
  3. Bernd Philipsen: Asta Heiberg. Later fame as a memoir writer. In: Schleswiger Nachrichten. June 9, 2010.