Friedrich Hartmann (local history researcher)

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Claus Peter Hinrich Friedrich Hartmann (born August 31, 1821 in Plön ; † March 29, 1899 in Tellingstedt ) was a German pharmacist and local researcher.

Live and act

Friedrich Hartmann was a son of the pharmacist Carl Friedrich August Hartmann (1783–1850) and his wife Marina, née Jochims (1792–1853). His brothers included the local historian Rudolph Hartmann and the soldier and author Nicolaus Carl Magdalus Hartmann .

Hartmann attended high school in his hometown and then completed a pharmacy degree at the University of Kiel . He then worked as a provisional in several regions of Germany and traveled frequently to Switzerland and Italy. On September 16, 1859, Hartmann married in Preetz Ida Amalia Margaretha Sophie Wörpel (1837-1917), who came from the merchant family of Konrad Wörpel and Sophia Emerantia Mackeprang. The couple had their son Rudolph Friedrich Konrad (1860–1930), who later took over his father's pharmacy, which he had bought in Tellingstedt in 1860.

Like his brother Rudolph, Friedrich Hartmann dealt with the early history of the Dithmarschen region. He collected items from chicken graves around Tellingstedt that the Kiel Museum for Patriotic Antiquities could not buy. Instead, a facility in Berlin took over the exhibits that were destroyed during World War II. His most famous find, the Glüsing sun disk , was almost completely destroyed in the process. A replica of this is now in a museum in Albersdorf .

literature

  • Dietrich Korth: Hartmann, Friedrich . in: Schleswig-Holstein Biographical Lexicon . Volume 2. Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1971, p. 168

Individual evidence

  1. Gold disc explanations on the website of the Albersdorf Museum. Retrieved January 21, 2017.