Gottfried Lorenz

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Gottfried Lorenz (* 1940 ) is a German teacher and author .

Life

Lorenz studied history , German , sociology and Scandinavian studies and received a doctorate in modern history . After completing his studies, he initially worked as a research assistant in Bonn at the Association for Research into Modern History and later (until 2005) as director of studies at the Glinde grammar school in Schleswig-Holstein . As an author, he has published several books, in particular on the Thirty Years War , Old Icelandic mythology and the history of homosexuals in Hamburg from 1919 to the present.

Works (selection)

  • Translation of the novel Passionsspelet by Jonas Gardell (original title: The Passion Play). Münster 2016.
  • Translation of the novel En livslång kärlek by Bengt Söderbergh (original title: A lifelong love ). Münster 2016.
  • Heinrich Christian Meier and his two books about the Neuengamme concentration camp. In: Rosa Strippe e. V. (Ed.): Exclusion - Persecution - Acceptance. Festschrift for the 35th birthday of the Rosa Strippe association [in Bochum]. Hamburg 2016.
  • Discriminate - criminalize - eliminate. Studies on the history of homosexuality in Hamburg before and after 1945. Hamburg 2016.
  • Liberal Hamburg? Persecution of homosexuals by the police and the judiciary after 1945 (with Ulf Bollmann), Hamburg 2013.
  • Töv, di schiet ik. Contributions to Hamburg's gay history (= gender discussion. Volume 20). LIT publishing house. Münster 2013.
  • Sin Babylon Harburg? Homosexual and pedophile scandals in Hamburg-Harburg during the Nazi era. In: Invertito. Yearbook for the History of Homosexualities. Volume 13, published by the Association for Homosexuality and History. V. Männerschwarm Verlag, Hamburg 2011, ISBN 978-3-86300-118-6 , urn : nbn: de: 101: 1-201406091316 , ZDB -ID 1498731-4 ( uni-hamburg.de [PDF; 9.1 MB ; limited access]).
  • Hamburg as the gay capital of the 1950s. The homophile scene and its supporters for the abolition of § 175 StGB. In: powerlessness and rebellion. Edited by A. Pretzel, V. Weiß. Hamburg 2010.
  • Homosexual persecution in Hamburg. 1919–1969 (with Bernhard Rosenkranz and Ulf Bollmann). Lambda, Hamburg 2009.
  • Hamburg in other ways (with Bernhard Rosenkranz). Lambda, Hamburg 2005.
  • Flensborg Avis. A Danish newspaper in Germany. Observations by a reader from the Hamburg area 1988–1993. In: Grenzfriedenshefte. Flensburg March and June 1994.
  • (as ed.) Sources on the prehistory and on the beginnings of the Thirty Years War (= selected sources on German history of the modern age. Volume 19). Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, Darmstadt 1991, ISBN 3-534-04833-4 , urn : nbn: de: 101: 1-2019062305404748274879 .
  • (as ed.) Sources on the history of Wallenstein (= selected sources on German history in modern times. Volume 20). Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, Darmstadt 1987, ISBN 3-534-01245-3 , urn : nbn: de: 101: 1-2019062305341497858494 .
  • Snorri Sturluson, Gylfaginning. Texts, translation, commentary (= texts on research. Volume 48). Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, Darmstadt 1984, ISBN 3-534-09324-0 (Text in Old Icelandic and German; standard work on Gylfaginning).
  • (as arrangement) Acta Pacis Westphalicae (APW). II C. Volume. 3: The Swedish correspondence 1646–47. Aschendorff, Münster 1975, DNB 750380780 (incorrect ISBN 3-402-5021-8 in the template ).
  • The Archbishopric of Bremen and the Administrator Friedrich during the Westphalian Peace Congress. A contribution to the history of the Swedish-Danish power struggle in the 17th century (= series of publications by the Association for Research into Modern History, Volume 4). Aschendorff, Münster / Westf. 1969, DNB 457459557 (Zugl .: Dissertation, Univ. Des Saarlandes, Saarbrücken 1969, DNB 482595868 ).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Hamburg in other ways. The history of gay life in the Hanseatic city. Bernhard Rosenkranz. Gottfried Lorenz. (No longer available online.) In: hamburg-auf-anderen-wegen.de. November 17, 2006, archived from the original on November 20, 2016 ; Retrieved October 1, 2019 (date of the first memento: November 17, 2006).