Dietrich Harre

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Hans-Dietrich Harre (born January 6, 1926 - † May 29, 2018 in Greifswald ) was a German sports scientist and university professor . He was called the " Nestor of training science in Germany".

Life

Harre studied at the Humboldt University in Berlin and worked from 1950 to 1990 at the German University of Physical Culture (DHfK) in Leipzig . He taught in particular in the areas of "Theory of competitive sport" and "Theory and methodology of physical education". In 1969 he brought out the book "Trainingslehre", which in 1957 and 1964 had precursors in the form of distance learning letters. The book made Harre known “nationally and internationally” as well as in “East and West”. It was described as "the most important work in the field of general training teaching in German". It was published in nine editions by 1989, and was reissued in English in 2013. "The name of the Leipzig sports scientist Dietrich Harre and his best-known publication, the 'Training Doctrine', have become established terms for generations of sports scientists and sports teachers," said a colloquium of the Training Science section of the German Association for Sports Science in cooperation with the Federal Institute for Sports Science and the Sports Science Faculty of the University of Leipzig on the occasion of Harre's 75th birthday in 2001.

Within the scope of his research activities, Harre dealt among other things with the topics of "strength training in the junior area of ​​canoe racing", with the "relationships between stress and recovery in the microcyclic structure of training in endurance sports", with "problems of athletic training and the training stress in sports teacher training der DHfK ”and in 1993 put historical, present and future topics and development aspects of training science at the center of a publication.

In 1990, shortly before his retirement, Harre was appointed adjunct professor for "Theory and Methodology of Training".

In sporting practice, Harre was the trainer of the rowers at SC DHfK Leipzig .

Individual evidence

  1. Sports scientist Prof. Dietrich Harre has passed away. In: German Association for Sports Science. January 3, 2019, accessed January 13, 2019 .
  2. ^ Principles of Sport Training. Accessed January 13, 2019 .
  3. ^ Jürgen Krug, Hans-Joachim Minow, Dietrich Harre: Training principles. Foundation of exercise science. Colloquium of the German Association for Sports Science (dvs), Section Training Science, with the Federal Institute for Sports Science (BISp) and the University of Leipzig, Sports Science Faculty, on the occasion of the 75th birthday of Professor Dr. Dietrich Harre. 12-13 January 2001, Leipzig (=  scientific reports and materials of the Federal Institute for Sports Science ). Sport u. Book Strauss, 2002, ISBN 978-3-89001-377-0 ( bisp-surf.de [accessed on January 13, 2019]).
  4. Dietrich Harre: On the design of strength training with special exercises in the junior area of ​​canoe racing . In: Theory and Practice of Competitive Sports . tape 18 , no. 2 , 1980, p. 55–74 ( bisp-surf.de [accessed on January 13, 2019]).
  5. Dietrich Harre: On the relationships between stress and recovery in the microcyclic structure of training in endurance sports . In: Theory and Practice of Physical Culture . tape 33 , no. 10 , 1984, ISSN  0563-4458 , pp. 767-772 ( bisp-surf.de [accessed on January 13, 2019]).
  6. Dietrich Harre: On some problems of sports training and the training load in sports teacher training at the DHfK . In: Scientific journal of the German University for Physical Culture . tape 13 , no. 2 , 1971, ISSN  0457-3919 , p. 57–63 ( bisp-surf.de [accessed on January 13, 2019]).
  7. Dietrich Harre, Günter Schnabel: On the origin, status and further development of training science . 1993, ISBN 978-3-88345-404-7 , pp. 23–36 ( bisp-surf.de [accessed January 13, 2019]).
  8. ^ Sports scientist Prof. Dietrich Harre on his 90th birthday | Trainer Academy Cologne of the DOSB eV Accessed on January 13, 2019 .
  9. Gerhard Lehmann et al. (Ed.): German Sport University for Physical Culture Leipzig 1950-1990 . ISBN 978-3-89899-286-2 , pp. 46 .