Günther Rönnebeck

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Günther Rönnebeck (born September 28, 1901 in Leipzig , † February 27, 1986 in Hanover ) was a German educator and ministerial official .

education

Rönnebeck was a Protestant and the son of a merchant. After graduating from high school, he studied German, history and sports from 1919 with a view to teaching at grammar schools, first at the University of Rostock and later at the Philipps University in Marburg. He received his doctorate in 1922 with a study on dialect geography .

Professional development

Between 1924 and 1929 he taught at private rural education centers , such as the reform pedagogical school by the sea founded by Martin Luserke on the North Sea island of Juist and at the Pforta state school . From 1929 he worked in the state school service at grammar schools in Hanover. Until the transfer of power to the National Socialists in 1933, he was press spokesman for the German Association of Philologists .

In World War II he was used as a soldier. After the end of the war, from autumn 1945 he belonged to a group of educators around Adolf Grimme in the Hanover Executive Committee. He was supposed to be head of the Schloss Gaienhofen boarding school , but had to cancel there due to his new obligations. In the newly created Lower Saxony Ministry of Education, which was headed by Grimme, he was initially assigned the position of high school council and the function of school reform advisor, where he helped develop the so-called Hanover Plan (1946/47).

In 1947 he succeeded Otto Haase as head of the school department of the Ministry of Culture. In this capacity, he worked as a ministerial advisor and ministerial director for nineteen years before he retired.

In addition to him, for example, Hans Alfken worked as head of the youth department of the Ministry of Culture. Rönnebeck was the superior of Rudolf Fiedler (1899–1992), Anna Mosolf (1885–1974), Katharina Petersen (1889–1970) and Karl Turn (1905–1953).

In 1952/53, Rönnebeck was also State Secretary and, in addition to the organizational management of the Ministry of Culture, he also represented the then Minister of Education Richard Voigt . Rönnebeck worked in his function under the ministers of culture Grimme (SPD), Voigt (SPD), Schlüter (FDP) and Langeheine (CDU).

On October 1, 1966, Rönnebeck retired.

Works (excerpt)

  • The responsibility of the school for decency and safety in traffic . Lecture during the pedagogical conference for traffic education in Lüneburg 1956, jointly organized by the HUK-Verband and the Bundesverkehrswacht e. V. Bundesverkehrswacht (Ed.), Bonn 1957.
  • with Hermann Meyer: The European nation-state system - peoples and states between Europe . Series: New Community Studies for High Schools. Hermann Schroedel Verlag, Hanover 1966.
  • as ed. with Hermann Meyer: Europe - Idea and Reality. For world peace and supranational community . Schroedel, Hanover 1968.
  • with Rolf Hauer / Karl-Jürgen Nagel: Parents and school in Lower Saxony. A guide . Series: Die Schule in Niedersachsen, Vol. 4, Hermann Schroedel Verlag, Hanover 1970.

Engagements (example)

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Rönnebeck, Günther (1902-1986) . In: Federal Archives, Central Database of Legacies. From: nachlassdatenbank.de, accessed on June 10, 2017
  2. Rönnebeck, Dr. Günther - Ministerialrat in the Lower Saxony Ministry of Education . In: Secret State Archives Prussian Cultural Heritage. From: deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de, accessed on June 10, 2017
  3. ^ Enrollment of Günther Rönnebeck . From: uni-rostock.de, accessed on June 10, 2017
  4. ^ Günther Rönnebeck: Studies on the dialect geographic difference between he and he . In: Teuthonista, year 3, H. 2/3 (1926/1927), pp. 170-172.
  5. ^ Wilhelm Pieper: Lower Saxony school reforms in the air fleet command: from the Lower Saxony educational center to the IGS Franzsches Feld . Verlag Julius Klinkhardt, Bad Heilbrunn 2009, ISBN 978-3-7815-1683-0 , pp. 75-76.
  6. ^ Letter from Adolf Grimme to Günther Rönnebeck dated October 7, 1948 . In: Dieter Sauberzweig (Ed.): Adolf Grimme. Letters . Series: Publications of the German Academy for Language and Poetry Darmstadt, vol. 39. Wallstein Verlag, Göttingen 1967. ISBN 978-3-89244-133-5 , p. 150.
  7. ^ Letter from Adolf Grimme to Günther Rönnebeck from August 9, 1951 . In: Dieter Sauberzweig (Ed.): Adolf Grimme. Letters . Series: Publications of the German Academy for Language and Poetry Darmstadt, vol. 39. Wallstein Verlag, Göttingen 1967. ISBN 978-3-89244-133-5 , p. 172.
  8. ^ Letter from Adolf Grimme to Günther Rönnebeck dated July 13, 1953 . In: Dieter Sauberzweig (Ed.): Adolf Grimme. Letters . Series: Publications of the German Academy for Language and Poetry Darmstadt, vol. 39. Wallstein Verlag, Göttingen 1967. ISBN 978-3-89244-133-5 , p. 183.
  9. ^ Rüdeger Baron: Reform Education and Protestant School in the 20th Century . Waxmann Verlag, Münster 2011, ISBN 978-3-8309-2507-1 , pp. 130-131.
  10. Bernd Dühlmeier: And the school was still moving: unknown reform pedagogues and their projects in the post-war period . Verlag Julius Klinkhardt, Bad Heilbrunn 2004, ISBN 978-3-7815-1328-0 , pp. 45-46.
  11. Horst Wetterling: The painless change of school . In: Die Zeit, 13/1965, March 26, 1965. From: zeit.de, accessed on June 10, 2017
  12. Main State Archives Hanover, Nds. 400 acc. 121/81 No. 795 / I - 795/6.
  13. Looking back - looking into the future . In: Sonnenberg letters for international understanding . Braunschweig 1969