Conrad Christoph Heinemann

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Conrad Christoph Heinemann (also: Konrad Christoph Heinemann ; born March 30, 1647 in Oesselse ; died June 2, 1706 in Hanover ) was a German Protestant clergyman and school principal . The name of the person also referred to as "the thundering Moses " became part of the UNESCO World Heritage Document through multiple mentions in the correspondence of the universal scholar Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz .

Life

Conrad Christoph Heinemann was born shortly after the end of the Thirty Years' War as the son of the preacher Johann Heinemann, who worked in Oesselse in the Principality of Hildesheim . He attended schools in Hildesheim, Hanover and Wolfenbüttel and enrolled at the University of Jena in 1666 , where he disputed as a respondent on the subjects of Exhibitivis Enunciationibus , de angelis , de Christi praecursore Joanne baptista and de perseverantia sanctorum , and participated in the disputes in 1670 graduated with the title of Magister . In the following year 1671 he worked briefly as vice rector at the Martineum in Halberstadt and in 1672 moved as rector to Braunschweig at the local Katharinenschule .

In 1675 Heinemann moved to Hanover, where he took up the position of pastor at the Aegidienkirche in the same year . There he was - as the successor of Magister Georg Münch - the 22nd preacher at the Aegidienkirche after the Reformation of Hanover. Around two years later, Heinemann took over the office of pastor at the Hanoverian market church St. Georgii et Jacobi in 1677 as successor to Hermann Erdmann .

Heinemann was a contemporary of the universal scholar Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz , who also lived and worked in the royal seat of the Duchy of Braunschweig-Lüneburg and later in Kurhannover . As an opponent of Leibniz, “the absurd pastor Heinemann zu Hannover” first brought up the proverb “Leibnitz, Loevenir”, which means something like “Leibniz who believes nothing ”.

family

With his wife Anna Dorothea Wideburg - sister of the Helmstedt professors Heinrich Wideburg and Christoph Tobias Wideburg - Heinemann became the parent of Johannes, who was born on June 5, 1673 in Braunschweig and died of typhus on February 10, 1693 in Heinrich Wideburg's house in Helmstedt Balthasar Heinemann . His parents had a stone grave monument placed for their son in the southern church cemetery of St. Stephani in Hildesheim.

Fonts

  • Johann Christoph Hundeshagen, Conrad Christoph Heinemann, Johannes Maßwedel, Georgius Preussen, Johannes Ericus Pape, Georg. Goezius, Johann. Ern. Gerhardus, Georgius Gerh. Göding, Franciscus Meyer, Henricus Jacobi: Disputatio Academica De Exhibitivis Enunciationibus , Jenae: Krebsius, 1668
  • Disputatio Theologica De Perseverantia Sanctorum. Quam In Illustri Salana Praeside Dn. Fridem. Bechmanno ... Publico Examini exponet M. Conrad. Christoph. Heinemann. Oesselia-Hildes. Author Et Respondens, Ad d. IXbris. MDCLXX. , Ienae: Typis Wertherianis, 1670; Digitized version of the Thuringian university and state library

Heinemann's more than 20 printed writings include, in particular, funeral sermons .

literature

  • Michael Schröder, JG Heinemann, Heinrich Theodor Heinemann: lines of congratulations on the wedding honor joy of the WolEhrenvesten / Vorachtbarn and Wolgelahrten Mr. M. Conradi Christophori Heinemann of the schools S. Martini in Halberstadt Wolverordende Con-Rectoris groom / with the ... Jgr. Anna Dorothea Des ... M. Balthasaris Wiedenburgs ... daughter as a bride: So held June 4th, Anno 1672. / Auffgesetzet by Good Friends and Relatives , Helmstädt: Printed by Jacob Müllern, [1672];
  • MEF Schmersahl's Reliable Messages from Recently Deceased Scholars , Volume 1, p. 206
  • Heinrich Wilhelm Rotermund : Heinemann (Conrad Christoph) , in ders .: The learned Hanover or lexicon of writers, learned businessmen and artists who have lived and are still living in and outside of all the provinces belonging to the Kingdom of Hanover since the Reformation the most credible writers compiled , Volume 2, Carl Schünemann, Bremen 1823, pp. 300–302; Digitized by the State and University Library Bremen

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f Heinrich Wilhelm Rotermund: Heinemann (Conrad Christoph) , in ders .: The learned Hanover or lexicon of writers, learned businessmen and artists who, since the Reformation, in and outside of all the provinces belonging to the Kingdom of Hanover have lived and still live, compiled from the most credible writers , Volume 2, Carl Schünemann, Bremen 1823, pp. 300–302; Digitized by the State and University Library Bremen
  2. n.v . : Heinemann, Konrad Christoph in the database of Niedersächsische Personen ( new entry required ) of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Library - Lower Saxony State Library [undated], last accessed on August 14, 2020
  3. a b c Hermann Wilhelm Bödeker : The Reformation of the old town of Hanover in 1533. A preparatory document for the third commemoration of our city's conversion to the Protestant church. In addition to a list of the Protestant church servants employed here ... , Hanover: Hahnsche Hofbuchhandlung, 1833, pp. 17–18; Digitized via Google books
  4. ^ Heinemann, Conrad Christoph (1706) in the personal and correspondence database of the Leibniz Edition
  5. ^ A b Johann Christoph Adelung : Heinemann (Conrad Christoph) , in ders .: Continuation and additions to Christian Gottlieb Jöcher's general scholarly lexicon, in which the writers of all classes are described according to their most distinguished living conditions and writings , Volume 2: E - J , Leipzig: in Johann Friedrich Gleditschen's act, 1787, column 1873; Digitized via Google books
  6. Christoph Gottlieb von Murr : Journal of Art History and General Literature , Volume 7, Nuremberg: Johann Eberhard Zeh, 1779, p. 219; Digitized via Google books
  7. Sabine Wehking : DI 61, Stadt Helmstedt, No. 322 † in the inscription catalog of the city of Helmstedt on the Deutsche Insschriften Online (DIO) page