Friedrich Avé-Lallemant

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Georg Friedrich Ludwig Avé-Lallemant (born July 27, 1807 in Lübeck , † December 26, 1876 ibid) was a German Evangelical Lutheran clergyman and librarian.

Life

Avé-Lallemant was a son of the music teacher and language teacher Johann Heinrich Jacob Dionysius Avé-Lallemant (1776-1852) and his wife Friederike Marie Canier (1783-1857), Huguenot and descendant of Admiral Gaspard II. De Coligny, seigneur de Châtillon (1519 -1572). The couple had 10 children, 6 sons and 4 daughters. His uncle was the pianist and cathedral organist Friedrich Avé-Lallemant (1774-1853), who had already made music with Louis Ferdinand of Prussia . The doctor and South American researcher Robert Christian Avé-Lallemant (1812-1884), the criminalist and writer Friedrich Christian Benedikt Avé-Lallemant (1809-1892) and the music teacher and music writer Theodor Avé-Lallemant (1806-1890) were his brothers.

He attended the Katharineum in Lübeck and, at the same time, received musical instruction from his father with his siblings. After graduating from Michaelis in 1829, he studied Protestant theology , initially for three years at the University of Jena . In Jena he became a member of the Arminia fraternity and the St. Pauli Jena singers . He then studied for a year and a half at the University of Berlin . Here he found access to the circle around Wilhelm von Humboldt . After his exams he worked as a private tutor, like almost all future evangelical clergymen of his time, in the family of a major von Egloffstein in Saxony and Potsdam . In Saxony he met Andreas Gottlob Rudelbach .

In 1837 he went to Lübeck and became a teacher at the Ernestinenschule daughter school . Probably through the mediation of his brother Robert, who had lived in Rio de Janeiro since 1837 , he was called on March 15, 1843 to preach to the German Lutheran congregation in Rio; for this service he was ordained pastor by Bishop Daniel Amadeus Neander in Berlin. During his tenure, the first church in the parish was built; In addition to Rio, he also looked after the community in Petrópolis in its early years. He was considered a pastor with a positive , serious charisma , but his unfriendly obstinacy led to tensions, so that in 1848 he declared his resignation.

In 1849 he returned to Lübeck. From 1850 to 1857 he ran a boys' boarding school here. At his request he was accepted into the Mecklenburg church service and on February 22, 1857 elected pastor in Warnemünde . Since 1865 he was a member of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology .

At Easter 1869 he left office and went back to Lübeck. In the last years of his life he worked as a library assistant at the city ​​library and was mainly entrusted with cataloging work.

Since June 29, 1843 he was married to Caroline, b. Drenckhahn (born August 26, 1821 in Penzin ), a daughter of the pensioner Friedrich Bernhard Drenckhahn on Penzin and niece of the landdrosten Christian Friedrich Anton Drenckhahn. The couple's sons included Julius (* 1849), Theodor (* 1852) and Moritz (* 1860).

Awards

Works

  • Memories of Brazil. Lübeck: in commission of the von Rodenschen Buchhandlung 1854
  • Way to peace. Sermon, on the 22nd Tr. November 20th 1859 about the evangel. Pericope held. Rostock 1860
  • The hymn book: Warnemünde story. Ludwigslust: Hinstorff 1864 ( digitized , Rostock University Library ). 2nd edition: Warnemünde: E. Krakow 1928.

literature

  • Friedrich Walter: Our regional clergy from 1810 to 1888: biographical sketches of all Mecklenburg-Schwerin clergy. Self-published, Penzlin 1889, p. 341f.
  • Conrad Nikolaus Lührsen: The Avé-Lallemant family and their descendants. In: German Family Archives (DFA) Volume 23, Neustadt an der Aisch 1963, pp. 205–243
  • Roland Spliesgart: “Brazilianization” and Acculturation: German Protestants in the Brazilian Empire using the example of the parishes in Rio de Janeiro and Minas Gerais (1822–1889). (= Studies on the history of Christianity outside Europe (Asia, Africa, Latin America) 12) Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz 2006 ISBN 978-3-447-05480-5 , esp.p. 218 ff.
  • Grete Grewolls: Who was who in Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania. The dictionary of persons . Hinstorff Verlag, Rostock 2011, ISBN 978-3-356-01301-6 , p. 328 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Johann Hennings, Wilhelm Stahl, Musikgeschichte Lübeck , 1951, p. 142
  2. Hermann Genzken: The Abitur graduates of the Katharineum in Lübeck (grammar school and high school) from Easter 1807 to 1907. Borchers, Lübeck 1907. (Supplement to the school program 1907) urn : nbn: de: hbz: 061: 1-305545 , No. 257; Co-high school graduate was u. a. Theodor Curtius
  3. Bernhard Schroeter (ed.): For fraternity and fatherland: Festschrift for the fraternity and student historian Prof. (FH) Dr. Peter Kaupp. 2006 ISBN 978-3-8334-4444-9 , p. 179
  4. ^ Marlon Ronald Fluck: Basel Missionaries in Brazil: Emigration, Awakening and Becoming Church in the 19th Century. (= Basel and Bern studies on historical and systematic theology ISSN  0171-6840 72), Bern etc: Lang 2004 ISBN 978-3-03910-205-1 , p. 302