Demeter Isopescul

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Demeter Isopescul (born October 3, 1839 in Frătăuții Vechi, Bukowina ; † May 1, 1901 in Vienna ) was a Romanian teacher in the Austrian crown land of Bukowina.

Life

Isopescul's father was a priest in the Romanian Orthodox Church . Demeter Isopescul attended elementary school in Radautz and the kk I. Staatsgymnasium Chernivtsi . One of his teachers was Aron Pumnul . After graduating from high school , he studied Greek Orthodox theology in Chernivtsi . Since he wanted to become a teacher, he moved to the University of Vienna after a year to study geography and history for seven semesters . From 1864 he was a supplent and teacher in Suczawa . As an imperial-royal professor of geography and history, he returned to the Czernowitz high school in 1869. He was appointed to the kk state school board and in 1870 was appointed director of the newly established teacher training institute . At first it was only open to boys; but Isopescul opened a department for girls in 1872. As the first teacher in Bukovina , he taught pedagogy in Romanian . He was the school inspector of the Romanian elementary schools.

From 1873 he published the Bukowinaer Pedagogical Leaflets for Romanian schools and teachers. In Vienna, he was committed  to the preservation of cultural monuments in Bukovina from 1875 - the year the Franz Joseph University was founded .

In the Reichsrat election in 1901 he was elected to the Reichsrat .

With his wife Aglaia Constantinovici-Grecu he had a daughter and four sons.

Fonts

  • Relations of Charlemagne with the Saracens in Spain and with the Abbasid Chaliphs of Baghdad . Chernivtsi 1869.
  • The theorem of the Fourier series . Chernivtsi 1873.
  • Schematism of the Bukovinian elementary schools and teachers, compiled on the basis of official data . Bukovinian State Teachers' Association, Chernivtsi 1894.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Rudolf Wagner: The foundation and development of the Imperial and Royal High School in Chernivtsi . Series of publications by the Landsmannschaft der Buchenlanddeutsche Bukowina, 1986, p. 50.