Small castle high school

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Small castle high school
Small castle, main entrance.
type of school high school
founding 1814
address

Kleine Burg 5/7
38100 Braunschweig

place Braunschweig
country Lower Saxony
Country Germany
Coordinates 52 ° 15 '48 "  N , 10 ° 31' 22"  E Coordinates: 52 ° 15 '48 "  N , 10 ° 31' 22"  E
student 904 (as of April 2013)
Teachers 87
management Ingo Stübig
Website www.kleineburg.de

The Kleine Burg grammar school is a grammar school in Braunschweig .

history

Pott'sche Higher School for Daughters

The story of the Little Castle begins on June 24, 1814 with the establishment of a private secondary school for girls by the three unmarried sisters Johanne Dorothee Albertine (1783 - March 6, 1837), Henriette Louise (November 5, 1778 - July 17, 1833) and Auguste Wilhelmine Caroline Pott (November 7, 1785 - January 16, 1854), which officially opened on August 1, 1815. The three sisters had previously run a private educational institution for girls from the upper class. In 1836 the "Pottsche higher private daughter school" had 100 students and 19 teachers. After the death of the sisters and their successor, the city of Braunschweig took over the private school in 1863. The school was initially located at An der Catharinenkirche 4, until the first school building still in use today was built by Carl Tappe in 1867 in Small Castle 6 .

From 1880, the two school buildings housed the three schools, the secondary school for girls, the municipal girls 'school and the teachers' college. In the same year, the girls 'higher school was recognized as a higher school, making the education there on an equal footing with the boys' education at the gymnasium. However, an equivalent degree was only gradually obtained with the introduction of the restricted higher education entrance qualification in 1913 and the general higher education entrance qualification in 1917.

In 1957, the Ina Seidel School was split from the Kleine Burg grammar school , but was closed again in 1990.

Between 1949 and 2002, the Braunschweig evening grammar school was also located at the Kleiner Burg, and until 1968 it was even in personal union. In 1975 co-education was introduced at the Little Castle . As a result of the school structure reform in Lower Saxony in 2004,  a second school location was set up at Echternstraße 1 for the 5th and 6th grades, in 2008 the school location Leopoldstraße 20 was taken over by the Lessinggymnasium and set up for upper-level teaching for secondary school graduates.

The founders of the school: The sisters (from left to right):
Caroline, Albertine and Louise Pott.
Commemorative plaque for the 175th anniversary in 1989.

Known teachers

  • Otto Hohnstein (1842–1909), historian and writer
  • Anna Klie (1858–1913), teacher of drawing and handicraft, was a student there herself

Known students

literature

  • Director and college of the Kleine Burg girls' high school: 100 years of Kleine Burg. Festschrift for the 100th anniversary , Braunschweig 1963
  • Lothar Guhlich: Small Castle High School. In: Luitgard Camerer , Manfred Garzmann , Wolf-Dieter Schuegraf (eds.): Braunschweiger Stadtlexikon . Joh. Heinr. Meyer Verlag, Braunschweig 1992, ISBN 3-926701-14-5 , p. 128 .
  • College of the Kleine Burg grammar school : Kleine Burg grammar school. Festschrift for the 125th anniversary , Braunschweig 1988
  • College of the Kleine Burg grammar school : Kleine Burg grammar school. Review of the 125th anniversary , Braunschweig 1988

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Garzmann, Schuegraf, Pingel: Braunschweiger Stadtlexikon - supplementary volume , Braunschweig 1996, p. 106
  2. ^ Chronicle of the city of Braunschweig for 1815
  3. ^ Richard Moderhack (Ed.): Braunschweigische Landesgeschichte at a glance , in sources and research on Braunschweigische Geschichte , Volume 23, Braunschweig 1979, p. 55
  4. The wild child comes back. In: Braunschweiger Zeitung. Retrieved June 7, 2018 .
  5. ^ College of the Kleine Burg grammar school : Kleine Burg grammar school. Review of the 125th anniversary , p. 40f
  6. Kurt Otto Friedrichs. In: braunschweig.de. City of Braunschweig, accessed on December 7, 2011 (A personality board of the BLIK - Braunschweiger guidance and information system for culture in front of a house An der Paulikirche commemorates the couple Kurt Otto Friedrichs and Nellie Friedrichs, née Bruell, who received the city's citizen medal in 1989 Braunschweig was honored and after which the Nellie-Friedrichs-Straße is named.).
  7. a b College of the Kleine Burg grammar school : Kleine Burg grammar school. Review of the 125th anniversary , p. 56f
  8. Ina Seidel: Three cities of my youth , Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, Stuttgart 1960, p. 11
  9. Viola Roggenkamp: That voice, that tone! “Tadellöser & Wolff” made them famous. , In: Die Zeit of May 22, 1987
  10. Reinhard Bein : Eternal House. Jewish cemeteries in the city and country of Braunschweig. Döring, Braunschweig 2004, ISBN 3-925268-24-3 , p. 220.
  11. Reinhard Bein : You lived in Braunschweig. Biographical notes on the Jews buried in Braunschweig (1797 to 1983). ( Messages from the Braunschweig City Archives. 1.) Döring Druck, Braunschweig 2009, ISBN 978-3-925268-30-4 , p. 495.