Friedrich Ludin

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Friedrich Ludin (nickname Fritz; born January 18, 1875 in Karlsruhe , † March 29, 1941 in Freiburg im Breisgau ) was a German teacher and author.

Ludin was in 1898 at the University of Freiburg in Friedrich Kluge to Dr. phil. PhD. From 1904 he taught German and French at the Rotteck-Oberrealschule in Freiburg, from 1933 to 1940 as its director. Ludin wrote several works on German culture under the pseudonym Fritz Thumb.

He was married to Johanna, geb. Tanner (1875–1962), a painter from Lörrach. The SA-Obergruppenführer and later German envoy in Slovakia, Hanns Ludin , who was executed there in 1947, was her son.

Fonts

  • Adam Siber's adaptation of the "Nomenclator H. Junii": lexically explained (as a contribution to the localization of the new word stock) . Dissertation Freiburg 1898.
  • (Ed.): Alemanni book 1914. Art and poetry from South Baden . Reuss & Itta, Constance 1914.
  • German spirit. Hahn, Mannheim 1915 ( digitized version ).
  • The German Roland. A Bismarck speech. Troemer, Freiburg 1915.
  • Last day and the new Israel. From the Sermons on the Mount of Koehlerhannes. Lorenz, Freiburg 1919.
  • The German prophets. Warnings and reminders for Germany at a crossroads. Lorenz, Freiburg 1919.
  • The three wise men and their star. A German winter fairy tale for the consecration night. Lorenz, Freiburg 1919.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Franz Knipping:  Ludin, Friedrich. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 15, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1987, ISBN 3-428-00196-6 , p. 296 ( digitized version ).