Georg Hindrichson

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Georg Hindrichson

Georg Hindrichson (born March 22, 1854 in Bremerhaven , † May 21, 1945 in Cuxhaven ) was a German high school teacher and local historian.

Life

Hindrichson's parents were a paint dealer and the daughter of the superintendent in Ihlienworth . The paternal ancestors came from Sweden and had been in the Bremen shipping industry since 1700.

He attended the higher civil school in Bremerhaven and the old high school in Bremen . After graduating from high school, he studied history, geography and modern languages at the Eberhard Karls University . In 1872 he was reciprocated in the Corps Borussia Tübingen . When he was inactive , he moved to the Georg-August University in Göttingen and the Christian Albrechts University in Kiel . In the meantime he was doing his military duty in Bremerhaven with the Prussian Army . After he had passed the exam pro facultate docendi in Kiel , he taught as a scientific assistant teacher first at the state high school in Lübeck, then at private schools in Hamburg. He was promoted to Dr. phil. doctorate and completed the probationary year at the learned school of the Johanneum in Hamburg. There, among other things, the senior studies director Ernst Rautenberg made him familiar with the archeology of the Ritzebüttel office . From October 1, 1887, he was employed in Hamburg as a full teacher at the secondary school in front of the Lübecker Tor. At Easter 1892 he was transferred to the reorganized Higher State School in Cuxhaven - the later Amandus-Abendroth-Gymnasium  - as a senior teacher . In addition to his school duties, he devoted himself to the archeology and history of the area. He succeeded in introducing these areas into school lessons and conveying them to a wider audience. He was able to rely on the prehistoric and cultural history collection that the magistrate Adolph Reinecke had transferred to the school in 1892. Assigned to look after it, Hindrichson expanded it with finds from his own excavations . He taught in Cuxhaven until he retired. He published his numerous researches only to a limited extent. Some of them found their way into the books of his wife, the local writer Anna geb. Havighorst alias Anna Gerhard. From 1919 to 1931 he lived in Clausthal . Acquainted with Hermann Allmers , he became an early member of the Men from Morgenstern , who elected him honorary member in 1934.

Publications

  • On the geographical location of older Hamburg . Hamburg 1889.
  • A hundred numbers on German history . Itzehoe 1889.
  • Brockes and the Ritzebüttel Office. 1735–1741 , 1st part. Cuxhaven 1897.
  • Brockes and the Ritzebüttel Office. 1735–1741 , 2nd part. Cuxhaven 1898.
  • Brockes and the Ritzebüttel Office. 1735–1741 , 3rd part. Cuxhaven 1899.
  • The income register of the Ritzebüttel house from 1577 . Cuxhaven 1905.
  • Henrich Stange's income register of the Ritzebüttel house from 1577 . Cuxhaven 1907.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b H. Bickelmann (2002)
  2. Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 126/27.
  3. Until 1866, the Kingdom of Hanover had troops in Bremerhaven.
  4. Kössler's teacher lexicon
  5. Andreas Wendowski-Schünemann: The Dr. Reinecke collection in Cuxhaven . Announcements of the Amandus Abendroth High School Cuxhaven (1996), pp. 21-28.
  6. ^ Program Hamburg New Higher Citizens School
  7. a b c d e Program Cuxhaven Realschule 1893