Ludwig Hellner
Ludwig Hellner (born December 2, 1791 in Jeinsen , † August 2, 1862 in Hanover ; full name: Friedrich August Ludwig Hellner ) was a German architect . From 1822 he worked as a consistorial builder for the Evangelical Lutheran consistory in Hanover.
Life
Hellner was a son of the master carpenter Johann Christoph Hellner and brother of the Karlsruhe architect Johann Christoph Hellner . Hellner's son Georg Friedrich Hellner (born September 28, 1825 in Hanover; † April 28, 1860 there) also became an architect.
He received his training from Friedrich Weinbrenner in Karlsruhe. From around 1820 he lived again in Hanover, where he was granted citizenship in 1821 . In 1822 he received the provisional and in 1824 the final position at the consistory in Hanover . Hellner designed numerous, mostly classical church buildings during his forty-year term in office .
He died in 1862 and was buried in the Neustädter Friedhof in Hanover . His successor was Conrad Wilhelm Hase .
Work (incomplete)
About 462 construction projects by Ludwig Hellner are known, including
- Hanover-Hainholz , St. Mary's Church (1826–1828)
- Bakede , St. Nicolai (Bakede) , (1828–1829)
- Stolzenau , St. Jacobi (Stolzenau) , (1828–1830)
- Groß-Solschen , St. Pankratius (Solschen) (1828–1832)
- Oiste , Church (Oiste) , ev.-luth. Church (1825–1827)
- Schönhagen , church Schönhagen , ev.-luth. Church (1822–1831)
- Brockum , Church (Brockum) , ev.-luth. Church (1831–1833, demolished in 1971)
- Kirchdorf , St. Nikolaus (Kirchdorf) , (1829–1832)
- Didderse , St. Viti (Didderse) (1832–1834)
- Abbensen , Church (Abbensen (Edemissen)) , ev.-luth. Church (1834–1835)
- Bodenteich , St. Petri Church (Bad Bodenteich) (1834–1836)
- Kirchweyhe , Georgskirche (Kirchweyhe) , ev.-luth. Church (1833–1836)
- Oesselse , St. Nicolai (Oesselse) , (1835–1837)
- Bienenbüttel , St. Michaelis (Bienenbüttel) , (1836–1838)
- Rethem (Aller) , St. Marien (Rethem) , (1834–1839)
- Münstedt , church (Münstedt) , ev.-luth. Church (1838–1839)
- Eddesse , St. Bernward Church (Eddesse) (1837–1839)
- Bergen an der Dumme , Pauluskirche (Bergen an der Dumme) , (1836–1839)
- Bülitz , church (Bülitz) , ev.-luth. Church (1837–1839)
- St. Vitus (Rätzlingen) , ev.-luth. Church (1838)
- Dransfeld , St. Martin (Dransfeld) , (1839–1841)
- Empelde , Chapel Empelde , (1842)
- Brome , St. Marien (Brome) , (1840–1842)
- Brinkum , Church of the Holy Cross (Brinkum) (1842)
- Jesteburg , St. Marien (Jesteburg)
- Nienhagen , St. Laurentius
- Niedernstöcken , St. Gorgonius (Niedernstöcken) , (1841)
- Gestorf , St. Marien (Gestorf) , renovation (1842–1843)
- Deinsen , St. Nicolai (Deinsen) , (1843)
- Obershagen , St. Nicolai (Obershagen) , (1843–1844)
- Garbsen , ev.-luth. Church (Garbsen)
- Himbergen , Church (Himbergen) , ev.-luth. Church (1842–44)
- Lattice on the mountains , Christ Church (Salzgitter lattice) ev.-luth. Church (1844–46)
- Gielde , Gielde Church , ev.-luth. Church (1847)
- Bettrum , St. Martini (Bettrum) , (1848–49)
- Brelingen , church (Brelingen) , ev.-luth. Church (1848–49)
- Walsrode , St. Johannis Church (Walsrode) , (1847–49)
- Stiepelse , Marienkapelle (Stiepelse) , ev.-luth. Church (1852)
- Suderbruch , St. Katharinen (Suderbruch) (1851-1852)
- Esens , St. Magnus Church (Esens) , (1847-1854)
- Molzen , Marienkirche , (1852–1855)
- Scharzfeld , St. Thomas (Scharzfeld) , (1852–1855)
- Meine , St. Stephani (Meine) , (1853–1855)
- Eimsen , St. Pankratius (Eimsen) , (1855-1857)
- Colnrade , St. Marien (Colnrade) , (1856-1857)
- Mandelsloh, St. Osdag , planning for a renovation (not carried out)
- Nordstemmen , St. Johannis (Nordstemmen) , (1856–1862)
- Lutterhausen , Lutterhausen Church (1857-1859)
- Sudheim , St. Nicolai (Sudheim) , (1858-1859)
- Elbingerode (Harz) , two schools (1858–1859)
- Groß Lobke , St. Andreas (Groß Lobke) , (1861–1863)
See also
literature
- Ulfried Müller (Ed.): Friedrich August Ludwig Hellner. Consistory master builder in the Royal Consistory of Hanover. Festschrift to commemorate his 200th birthday. Evang. Regional Church Office - Office for Building and Art Maintenance, Hanover 1991.
- Hermann Mewes: The Lutheran church building in Lower Saxony with special consideration of the master builders of the Hanover Consistory , Sections 2, 3 and 4 of the dissertation presented in typescript in 1943 , in a commented and corrected publication in 1994 including additions to Hellner's catalog of works , published by Stefan Amt from the bhb Hanover (1994), passim ; bhb-hannover.de (PDF)
- Sid Auffarth u. a .: Laves and Hanover. 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 , p. 568 and others.
- Günther Kokkelink, Monika Lemke-Kokkelink : Architecture in Northern Germany. Architecture and handicrafts of the Hanover School 1850–1900. Schlueter, Hannover 1998, ISBN 3-87706-538-4 , p. 535 and others. (for Georg Friedrich Hellner )
- Helmut Knocke : Hellner, Friedrich August Ludwig . In: Dirk Böttcher , Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein, Hugo Thielen : Hannoversches Biographisches Lexikon . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2002, ISBN 3-87706-706-9 , p. 161, etc. via google books
- Helmut Knocke: Hellner, Friedrich August Ludwig . In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (eds.) U. a .: City Lexicon Hanover . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9 , p. 284.
Web links
Individual evidence
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Hellner, Ludwig |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Hellner, Friedrich August Ludwig (full name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German architect, Protestant consistorial builder |
DATE OF BIRTH | December 2, 1791 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Yes and no |
DATE OF DEATH | August 2, 1862 |
Place of death | Hanover |