Gustav Hohbach

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Bernhard Heinrich Gustav Hohbach (born September 28, 1803 in Gunzenhausen , † May 29, 1850 in Stuttgart ) was a German poet and lawyer .

Life

The son of the Ulm Finance Chamber Secretary Gustav Heinrich Hohbach and Caroline Helene, b. Around 1820, Fischer was one of Friedrich David Gräter's students at the Ulm grammar school and was introduced to Danish by him . On October 31, 1821, Hohbach began studying law in Heidelberg , 1823–1825 he studied at the Eberhard Karls University in Tübingen . In the Württemberg civil service, he was initially an administrative actuary at the court for the Black Forest district in Tübingen. In 1829 he moved to the Higher Regional Court in Spaichingen as an actuary . In the same year he became Senior Justice Assessor at the Court of Justice for the Danube District in Ulm, before he became Senior Justice Advisor at the Court for the Danube District in Ellwangen in 1837 . In 1845 he received an honorary doctorate from the Tübingen Faculty of Law. He died on May 29, 1850 at the age of 47 "from the face rose" (virus infection herpes zoster or streptococcal infection erysipelas ). He left a widow - in 1830 he had Charlotte Auguste Mathilde, b. Hauser, daughter of Friedrich Hauser, deacon, and his wife Friederike, b. Married Eisenlohr. and four children, three sons and one daughter.

Works

Hohbach wrote poems, some of which were printed in Cotta's Morgenblatt . Two legends ballads from Geislingen took Gustav Schwab in his much-read Albreiseführer on from 1,823th As a Gräter student, Hohbach was enthusiastic about folk traditions. He was the head of a society of Ulmers that collected Swabian folk traditions around 1831. Later he handed over the collection in his possession to Philipp Ludwig Adam , who announced his intention in 1843 that he wanted to hand it over to the Association for Art and Antiquity in Ulm and Upper Swabia. Their whereabouts are unknown. Hohbach was also otherwise active in the Ulm club system: in a Polish club and in the railway company.

As a lawyer, in addition to a monograph , Hohbach wrote articles on criminal law and criminal proceedings, with special regard to Württemberg (1836), a number of articles, primarily on criminal law.

literature

  • Christian Sigel: The Protestant Württemberg . Typewritten manuscript Stuttgart 1910–1928
  • Hölderlin Werke Vol. 7/4, 1977, p. 36f. WLB Stuttgart
  • Dieter Narr: Studies on the Late Enlightenment in the German Southwest . Stuttgart 1979, p. 514
  • Wilhelm Waibinger: Diaries 1821–1826 . Edited by Hans Königer. Vol. 2. Stuttgart 1993, p. 1411
  • Wolfram Haderthauer: Legends from Württemberg. Unpublished collections from the 19th century . Diss.Eichstätt 2001 (on microfiche), p. 38

Web links

Wikisource: Gustav Hohbach  - Sources and full texts

Individual evidence

  1. Family register of the Evang. Parish Ellwangen Volume 1, fol. 102b according to information from the Ellwangen City Archives. The father's name is different [1] .
  2. Dieter Narr: Studies for the Late Enlightenment in the German Southwest . Stuttgart 1979, p. 434f .; Hohbach received Gräter's estate, because in 1871 it was handed over to the Württemberg State Library by Ms. Oberjustizrat Hohbach . limited preview in Google Book search
  3. ^ Gustav Toepke: The register of the University of Heidelberg (5th part): From 1807 - 1846 . Carl Winter's University Bookstore, Heidelberg 1904, p. 213 ( online [accessed November 18, 2019]).
  4. ^ Württemberg: Government Gazette for the Kingdom of Württemberg. Scheufele, 1829, p. 33. Restricted preview in the Google book search
  5. ^ Carl Klüpfel: History and description of the University of Tübingen. - Tübingen, Fues 1849. Fues, 1849, p. 361. Restricted preview in the Google book search
  6. Family register (as above), also on the place of death.
  7. Main State Archives Stuttgart E 14 Bü 579 Qu. 80.
  8. http://www.freidok.uni-freiburg.de/volltexte/3459/pdf/Graf_schwabensagen.pdf
  9. ^ Negotiations of the Association for Art and Antiquity in Ulm and Oberschwaben, First Report, Ulm, March 6, 1843, p. 43 online
  10. Helmut Bleiber, Jan Kosim (ed.): Documents on the history of the German-Polish friendship 1830-1832 . Berlin [East] 1982; Anneliese Gerecke: The German response to the Polish survey of 1830 . Wiesbaden 1964, p. 73: Lecture of a censored Polish poem by Hohbach; limited preview in Google Book search
  11. Augsburger Postzeitung from January 4, 1836: Otto Borst: The Esslinger Pliensaubrücke . Esslingen 1971, pp. 242, 250. Restricted preview in the Google book search