Franz Dibelius
Franz Wilhelm Dibelius (born January 6, 1847 in Prenzlau , † January 20, 1924 in Dresden ) was a German Protestant theologian.
Life
Franz Wilhelm Dibelius came from a Pomeranian pastor family as the son of the senior teacher Wilhelm Dibelius and his mother Franziska (née Wiese) . He went to a graduation to the doctor of philosophy at the University of Halle-Wittenberg to Berlin , where he developed the Licentiate of Protestant theology acquired and 1871. Domhilfsprediger and inspector of Domkandidatenstifts was.
In 1873 he completed his habilitation in church history at the University of Berlin , worked there briefly as a private lecturer and in 1874 went to the Annenkirche in Dresden as a pastor. In 1884 he became superintendent of the Ephorie Dresden I and pastor at the Kreuzkirche . In 1910 he was appointed senior court preacher and vice president of the state consistory, which he held until his death in 1924. In 1922 he was the last in the line of Saxon court preachers since 1539. He was succeeded as the first Saxon regional bishop Ludwig Ihmels . As a theologian, he tried to convey a happy Christianity. Dibelius introduced the children's church service in Dresden and contributed songs to it. He pushed through the division of oversized parishes in the growing city, which led to the establishment of new churches.
He was also a co-initiator of the “Society of Saxon Church History” and, among other things, headed the Gustav-Adolph-Verein from 1893 , of which he had been a member since 1895. He appeared as a promoter of the Protestant diaspora in Bohemia , promoted the Protestant movement in Austria and was considered one of the leading men of German Lutheranism before the First World War .
Dibelius was married three times. In his first marriage he was married to Martha († 1887), the daughter of the senior consistorial councilor in Dresden Ewald Hoffmann, in his second marriage from 1888 to Elsbeth († 1901), the daughter of Major General Bruno Julius Otto Köhler and in his third marriage from 1905 with Helene, daughter of the Prussian lieutenant colonel Gustav Eduard Theodor Papen. His only child, Martin Dibelius, is from his first marriage . His nephew Otto Dibelius took him as a model.
Works (selection)
The list of works is consistent with the article on Dibelius in the German biography . However, Dibelius had a poet nephew of the same name, the pastor and habilitated historian Franz Dibelius (1881–1916), to whom the work My Last Is Filed is variously ascribed.
- The Children's Service , 1881
- The introduction of the Reformation in Dresden , 1889
- 10 years of the Protestant movement in Austria , 1909
- From the Holy Cross , 1910
- Thy Kingdom come, Sermons , 1912
- My Burden is Gone, Poems and Thoughts , 1917
- Happy Christianity, A Guide to the Evangelical Hymnbooks , 1921
literature
- Paul Wilhelm Gennrich: Dibelius, Franz. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 3, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1957, ISBN 3-428-00184-2 , p. 631 f. ( Digitized version ).
- Karl Heinz Voigt: Dibelius, Franz Wilhelm. In: Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL). Volume 27, Bautz, Nordhausen 2007, ISBN 978-3-88309-393-2 , Sp. 343-350.
- RGG
- Franz Blanckmeister : Franz Dibelius. A life of service to the Church . Dresden 1925
- Günther Wartenberg : The last Saxon court preacher Franz Wilhelm Dibelius (1847-1924). A Lutheran regional church at the beginning of the 20th century . In: Rudolf Mohr (ed.): "Everything is yours, but you are Christ." Festschrift for Dietrich Meyer . Cologne 2000, pp. 459-474.
Web links
- Literature by and about Franz Dibelius in the catalog of the German National Library
- History of Central Germany at the MDR
Individual evidence
- ↑ For the Dibelius family see Hartmut Fritz: Otto Dibelius. A cleric in the time between monarchy and dictatorship . Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 1998, p. 17f.
- ↑ Otto Dibelius: A Christian is always on duty. Experiences and experiences at a turning point . Kreuz-Verlag, Stuttgart, 1961, p. 9ff.
predecessor | Office | successor |
---|---|---|
Heinrich Ludwig Oskar Ackermann |
Court preacher in Dresden 1910–1922 |
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personal data | |
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SURNAME | Dibelius, Franz |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Dibelius, Franz Wilhelm |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German Protestant theologian |
DATE OF BIRTH | January 6, 1847 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Prenzlau |
DATE OF DEATH | January 20, 1924 |
Place of death | Dresden |