Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Gymnasium Greifswald
Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Gymnasium Greifswald | |
---|---|
type of school | high school |
founding | 1561 |
address |
Dietrich-Bonhoeffer-Platz 1 |
place | Greifswald |
country | Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 54 ° 5 '35 " N , 13 ° 22' 55" E |
carrier | City of Greifswald |
student | 568 |
Teachers | 57 |
management | Bernd Albrecht |
Website | www.jahngymnasium.de |
The Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Gymnasium is a grammar school in Greifswald . It was founded in 1561 as a municipal school and is one of the oldest schools in German-speaking countries.
history
Today's Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Gymnasium was founded in 1561 as Schola Senatoria (council school) by combining the three local trivial schools and housed in a wing of the "Gray Monastery" - that was the name of the Franciscan monastery in Greifswald, which was abandoned after the Reformation . During Lucas Tacke's rectorate from 1582 to 1612, the number of students rose to 300. In the Thirty Years' War and the subsequent conflicts in Swedish Pomerania , the number of pupils fell sharply in the 17th century.
In 1726, after negotiations between general superintendent Albrecht Joachim von Krakevitz and the council and clergy, new school regulations were issued based on the theses of the Halle pedagogue August Hermann Francke . However, the decline of the school continued. The number of students decreased to 16 in the second half of the 18th century. The dilapidated school building could only be repaired temporarily. After the school under Theophilus Coelestinus Piper had reached its lowest point in 1783, his successor Heinrich Ehrenfried Warnekros succeeded in implementing a fundamental reform of the school. With the support of the government in Stralsund and the citizenship, a civic educational institution was created with the conversion into a “scholarly and German school”. Classes in ancient languages were reduced in favor of mathematics, German, history and natural sciences . A new school building was built on the foundation walls of the former monastery church based on designs by the university drawing teacher Johann Gottfried Quistorp and inaugurated in 1799. Today the picture gallery of the Pomeranian State Museum is located here . In 1800 the school had 101 students again.
With the new curriculum introduced by the rector Christian Wilhelm Ahlwardt in 1816 after the transition from Swedish Pomerania to Prussia , the institution acquired the character of a learned school. Around 1820 the school was converted into a grammar school. In 1848 a real department was opened. Due to the growing number of students, the current building on the Wall was moved into in 1870. In 1913 the grammar school passed from municipal to Prussian administration and was later included in the group of 17 educational institutions of particular importance to the state. Since 1937 the grammar school was called " Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn -Schule". In 1947 the grammar school was converted into an extended high school and the lyceum was added , and co-education was introduced in 1948 .
Old high school in Mühlenstrasse. Watercolor by Anton Heinrich Gladrow
New high school. Lithograph by R. Geissler 1869
Teacher
- 1582–1612 Lukas Taccius , rector
- 1745–1764 Hermann Jacob Lasius , philologist, rector
- 1764–1767 Johann August Kriebel , theologian, rector
- 1768–1783 Theophilus Coelestinus Piper , theologian, rector
- 1783–1807 Heinrich Ehrenfried Warnekros , philologist, rector
- 1808–1810 Andreas Christoph Niz , philologist, rector
- 1810–1813 Gottlieb Mohnike , theologian, vice-principal
- 1811–1817 Christian Wilhelm Ahlwardt , philologist, rector
- 1819–1836 Christian David Breithaupt , theologian, rector
- 1830–1854 Hermann Paldamus , philologist, prorector
- 1850–1861 Robert Heinrich Hiecke , philologist, rector
- 1845–1878 Adolf Häckermann , philologist, senior teacher
- 1851–1861 Hermann Friedrich Christoph Lehmann , philologist, teacher
- 1898–1916 Philipp Wegener , philologist, director
- 1907–1912 Philipp Tribukait, high school professor
- 1921–1935 Clemens Thaer , mathematician, teacher
- 1924–1926 Heinrich Stengel , philologist, then rector at the Stralsund grammar school
student
- around 1765 Friedrich Andreas Stroth (1750–1785), German classical philologist and theologian
- around 1815 Hans Karl Barkow , anatomist and physiologist
- 1833–1846 Theodor Pyl , historian
- around 1865 Hans Delbrück , historian and politician
- around 1865 Max Lenz , historian
- around 1868 Max Ludwig Rohde , lawyer
- 1872 Max Hofmeier , gynecologist
- Gotthard Baier
- 1877–1879 Hermann Lietz , reform pedagogue
- around 1880 Georg Steinhausen , cultural scientist
- 1883 Hugo Wendorff , politician
- End of the 19th century. Walter Stengel , cultural historian
- 1931 Heinrich Ferdinand Curschmann , lawyer
- 1934 Berthold Beitz , manager
- until 1949 Konrad Fritze , historian
- until 1955 Manfred Stolpe , politician
literature
- Hermann Friedrich Christoph Lehmann: History of the grammar school in Greifswald . Greifswald 1861
- Max Schmidt: History of the grammar school and secondary school in Greifswald from 1861 to 1911 . Greifswald 1911 ( digitized version )
- Ludwig Wiese (Hrsg.): The higher school system in Prussia: Historical-statistical representation, on behalf of the Minister of the clergy, teaching and medicinal matters. Wiegandt and Grieben, Berlin 1864, pp. 156–157 ( digitized version )
- Biographies of excellent teachers and students at the state high school in Greifswald: founded in 1561 as Schola Senatoria, since 1937 Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Oberschule , Greifswald, from 1997 (series of publications)
Web links
- Literature about Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Gymnasium Greifswald in the state bibliography MV
- www.jahngymnasium.de
Individual evidence
- ^ A b Lutz Winkler: Cantors and city music in the second half of the 18th century in Greifswald. In: Joachim Kremer, Walter Werbeck (Hrsg.): The cantorate of the Baltic Sea region in the 18th century: preservation, expansion and dissolution of a church music office . Greifswald contributions to musicology 15. Frank & Timme, Berlin 2007, ISBN 978-3-86596-060-3 , p. 160-161 ( digitized version ).
- ↑ Irene Blechle: School childhood in the university town of Greifswald between the Swedish crown and the forty-eight revolution (1815–1848 / 1849). In: Werner Buchholz (Hrsg.): Childhood and youth in the modern age 1500-1900. Franz Steiner Verlag, 2000, ISBN 978-3-515-07259-5 , pp. 273-274 ( digitized version )
- ↑ from 1912 director of the Kgl. Realgymnasiums Goldap, killed in Poland in 1915, member of Corps Masovia
- ↑ Berthold Beitz in the Munzinger Archive , accessed on April 16, 2011 ( beginning of article freely accessible)
- ↑ PDF UA report LT Brandenburg 1st electoral period - printed matter 1/3009, page 36 Retrieved on October 20, 2010