Georg glasses (teacher)

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Georg Gläser (also: Georg Christian Wilhelm Gläser ; * July 21, 1773 in Laatzen ; † October 8, 1840 in Hanover ) was a German writer , teacher and school principal as well as a Freemason . According to another source, he is also said to have been a Protestant clergyman .

Life

Georg Christian Wilhelm Gläser was born in 1773 in Laatzen near Hanover at the time of the Electorate of Hanover as the son of "a staid Hanoverian non-commissioned officer". Since the father's financial means were barely sufficient to attend school, he initially taught his son in his own household. Although he was fond of the military, Glaser's father brought his son into contact with " beautiful literature ", who then learned primary school at the Royal School Teacher Seminar in Hanover .

After completing his studies, glasses first worked at various small schools; also Burgdorf was one of his haunts.

After the Höhere Stadt-Töchterschule in Hanover was founded in 1802 on Köbelingerstraße at the corner of Bullenstraße, southeast of what would later become the market hall , glasses were able to move there and work there as a teacher and headmaster for decades until the end of his life. His teaching skills led many of his early students to later send their own daughters to the glasses-run women's educational facility.

On June 2, 1832, glasses were accepted into the Zum Schwarzen Bär lodge, named after the Black Bear , in which he gave numerous speeches, for example in honor of the late master of the chair Wilhelm Blumenhagen . Glasses himself was elected lodge master in 1832.

When, after the end of the personal union between Great Britain and Hanover, on June 28, 1837, King Ernst August moved into the royal seat of the Kingdom of Hanover and his wife Queen Friederike also drove through the gate of honor to receive her, Georg glasses collected the “on her highest journey to the residence “Received poems and speeches and summarized them in the same year into a wreath of immortelles .

After several early writings, even after Glaser's death, the reading school textbook he had written appeared from the letters on ... numerous editions in the Hahn'schen Hofbuchhandlung .

Fonts (selection)

  • Friedrich Brandis (Ed.), GCW glasses: Masonic speeches and poems by GCW glasses, because. Speaker of the lodge to Black Bear. Manuscript for Brothers Freemasons , Hanover: from Friedrich Voigts , 1841; Digitized via Google books
  • GCW Glasses: Exercises in the Art of Reading Well. A reading book for teacher schools and for a class in which the pupils have finished reading, also for private lessons. 2 collections [in one book = complete]. Hanover: Hahn brothers. 2nd revised edition, enlarged with an appendix, 1813
    • [Tied up:] Second collection for schoolgirls in the early years of adolescence , 1809.
  • GCW glasses: Natural history picture book. A gift for young people, for pleasant and useful entertainment, with 80 (color.) Illustrations on 20 copper plates ... , 100 pages, Hanover, Hahnsche Hofbuchhandlung, 1820
  • GCW glasses: Aeschylearum Quaestionum Spec. I. Auctore CG Haupt. 1826. In: Critical Library for Schools and Education , New Series, 3rd Jhrg., Vol. 2, 3 Series 117, 118 and No. 119 from September 1830
  • GCW glasses: Immortelle wreath, wound from the poems received by Her Majesty the Queen Friederike von Hannover on her journey to the Residenz and some speeches addressed to the Höchst same on this occasion, together with a picture of the gate of honor erected for the solemn reception of the monarchs in the Residenz , 31 and a lithograph, Hanover: printed by the Hahnschen Hofbuchhandlung, 1837
  • GCW glasses: Reading school from the letters on, in a methodical sequence. In 1 vol , 8th edition, Hanover: Hahn'sche Hofbuchhandlung, 1845–1848

literature

  • Heinrich Wilhelm Rotermund : The learned Hanover or lexicon of writers, learned businessmen and artists who have lived and are still alive since the Reformation in and outside of all the provinces belonging to the Kingdom of Hanover, compiled from the most credible writers. Vol. 2, Bremen: Carl Schünemann, 1823, p. 131
  • Karl Goedeke

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Compare the information and cross-references from the German National Library
  2. a b c d e f g Friedrich Brandis (ed.), GCW glasses: Masonic speeches and poems by GCW glasses, because. Speaker of the lodge to Black Bear. Manuscript for Brothers Freemasons , Hanover: from Friedrich Voigts , 1841; Digitized via Google books
  3. Compare GCW glasses: Masonic speeches and poems ... Manuscript for Brothers Freemasons , with a foreword by Friedrich Brandis, Hanover: in Friedrich Voigts , 1841; Digitized via Google books
  4. a b o.V. : Glaeser, GCW ( Memento of the original from July 31, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. in the database of Niedersächsische Personen (new entry required) of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Library - Lower Saxony State Library [undated], last accessed on September 29, 2017 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / gwlb.de
  5. ^ Carl-Hans Hauptmeyer : 1802. In: Hannover Chronik , p. 109; Preview over google books
  6. ^ Klaus Mlynek : Ernst August, King of Hanover. In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (eds.) U. a .: City Lexicon Hanover . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9 , p. 163f.
  7. General bibliography for Germany. An overview of the literature of Germany with details of future works and other communications and notes relating to literary traffic , 2nd year, Leipzig: FA Brockhaus, 1837, p. 678; Digitized via Google books