Georg Friedrich Grimm

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Georg Friedrich Grimm ( Grimme ) (* before 1635; † 1690 ) was a 17th century book printer in Hanover .

Life

1,650 Georg Friedrich Grimm came into the possession of Offizin of Johann Friedrich Glaser . He is said to have published the European Monday newspaper or European Freytags newspaper from 1668 to 1673 . From 1670 he was a princely book printer and in 1685 a princely court printer.

With his wife Gertrud Cordes he had the sons Johann Peter and Andreas . After his death, his widow continued the business for two years until her son Johann Peter Grimm took it over until 1704.

His son Andreas was the successor to the printer Johann Heinrich Stock in Korbach from 1672 to 1688 ; around 1691 he was listed in Münden and from 1700 as a publisher in Korbach.

Well-known works (incomplete)

  • 1667, as Georg Friedrich Grimme in the copperplate engraving Beginning Writing by Johann Hemelinger
  • around 1668: Copper engraving with the "Entry of the bride of Duke Johann Friedrich zu Braunschweig-Lüneburg into Hanover on November 9, 1668"
  • 1668–1678: “probably” publication of the European Monday Newspaper or European Freytags Newspaper
  • M. Georgio Erythropilo Ministerii Seniore and Pastore to S. Georg and Jacob: Christianism Piorum…. Georg Friedrich Grimm, Hanover 1662, funeral sermon for Maria Janus (1616–1666), his mother-in-law;
  • Proskephalaion, That is / Spiritual main kissing ... [Address to the corpse of David Erythropel for the land rent master Christoff Blume ] Hanover: Georg Friedrich Grimm, 1662; digitally via the Göttingen State and University Library (SUB Göttingen).

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Christoph Reske: Georg Friedrich Grimm (see literature)
  2. a b Christoph Reske: The book printers of the 16th and 17th centuries in the German-speaking area: based on the work of the same name by Josef Benzing . In: Contributions to books and libraries . tape 51 . Harrassowitz, 2007, ISBN 978-3-447-05450-8 , ISSN  0408-8107 , p. 499 (1090 p., Limited preview in Google Book search).
  3. ^ Archives of the Historical Association for Lower Saxony, year 1849. Hanover 1851.
  4. digitally via the joint library network .