Carl Friedrich Leopold Hagemann

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Carl Friedrich Leopold Hagemann (also: Leopold Hagemann ; * presumably 1786; † 1868 ) was a German master builder and country architect and chamber architect. As a Royal Hanoverian civil servant, he was one of the first to help build the Hanover Railway .

Life

family

Leopold Hagemann was a son of the office director Theodor Hagemann, who worked in Celle, as well as a brother of the bailiff Georg Ludwig Wilhelm Hagemann , the customs director Th. Hagemann , who worked in Lüneburg, and the judicial councilor Franz Hagemann, who worked in Hildesheim .

Career

Carl Friedrich Ludwig Hagemann worked during the personal union between Great Britain and Hanover at the time of the Electorate of Hanover at the beginning of the 19th century, initially as a construction assistant to the senior building officer, Christian Ludwig Ziegler , before he became " Landbau - Conducteur " in Celle .

Even in the so-called “ French era ”, Hagemann changed employers, “[...] from around 1810 [as] a master builder in the grand duke. Mecklenburg “, served in Ludwigslust .

From 1817 Hagemann worked as a "chamber architect" in Hanover , now located in the kingdom of the same name . From 1818 on, he worked as a building officer for "[...] the technical processing of monastery construction matters" for the monastery chamber of Hanover . The Hanover State Calendar recorded him from 1830 as a consultant at the Domain Chamber . In the meantime, Hagemann had worked at the same time at the Hanover War Chancellery from 1822, where he was responsible for the "technical aspects of civil construction".

On behalf of the city of Hanover, the war construction councilor Hagemann prepared an expert opinion on the expansion of the city, similar to the one proposed by the city councilor August Heinrich Andreae in the following year 1829 ; later, however, Georg Ludwig Friedrich Laves prevailed with his city expansion plans. The war construction supervisor Leopold Hagemann was also in contact with Laves by letter in 1830 and 1844.

From 1843 Carl Friedrich Ludwig Hagemann worked for the Hanover Railway Directorate .

Works (selection)

The 1833 Royal Hanover Guard Grenadier Barracks on Waterlooplatz ; the listed building is now used by the GDWS center branch
  • Designs for the municipal hospital in Linden
  • around 1829: Military clothing commission at the bend in Georgstrasse ; in 1860 it was connected by a connecting corridor to the new building of the Hanover Polytechnic School , which had previously been built from 1834 to 1837 by the architect Ernst Ebeling
  • from around 1830: plans to standardize the buildings of the government building
  • at Waterlooplatz
    • 1831: Construction of the Guard Jäger barracks, opposite the later Guard Jäger barracks, destroyed in World War II
    • 1833: Construction of the Guard Grenadier barracks, later the Waterways and Shipping Directorate Center and GDWS , Waterloostraße 5
    • 1839: The commandant's house is converted into a barracks

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h i j Klaus Siegner : Architect biographies . In: Harold Hammer-Schenk , Günther Kokkelink (eds.): Laves and Hannover. Lower Saxony architecture in the nineteenth century , ed. by Harold Hammer-Schenk and Günther Kokkelink (revised new edition of the publication Vom Schloss zum Bahnhof ... ), Ed. Libri Artis Schäfer, 1989, ISBN 3-88746-236-X , pp. 567-571, especially p. 568
  2. a b c d Helmut Knocke , Hugo Thielen : Keyword CF Leopold Hagemann and name variants in Dirk Böttcher , Klaus Mlynek (ed.): Hannover. Art and culture lexicon , new edition, 4th, updated and expanded edition, Springe: zu Klampen, 2007, ISBN 978-3-934920-53-8 , pp. 88, 212, 269
  3. ^ Ernst Peter Johann Spangenberg : Historical-topographical-statistical description of the city of Celle in the Kingdom of Hanover , reprint [d. Edition] Celle, Schulze, 1826, Hannover-Döhren: von Hirschheydt, 1979, ISBN 978-3-7777-0091-5 and ISBN 3-7777-0091-6 , p. 289; Preview over google books
  4. Dieter Brosius : City expansion , in: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein: History of the City of Hanover , Vol. 2: From the beginning of the 19th century to the present , Hanover: Schlütersche Verlagsgesellschaft , 1994, ISBN 3-87706-364- 0 , p. 292f.
  5. Wolfgang Voigt (Red.), Helmut Knocke, Ulrich Steinbacher (contributors): Georg Ludwig Friedrich Laves. Finding aid on the estate , in: Hannoversche Geschichtsblätter , Neue Reihe, Vol. 42 (1988), pp. 233–283; here: p. 279
  6. Günther Kokkelink: 1837–1879: The Polytechnic School on Georgstrasse in the new city center , in Wolfgang Pietsch, Sid Auffarth (ed.): The University of Hanover: Your buildings, your gardens, your planning history. Edited on behalf of the University of Hanover, Imhof, Petersberg 2003, ISBN 3-935590-90-3 , pp. 69–72; here: p. 70; Preview over google books