Bundesgymnasium and Bundesrealgymnasium Vienna III

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Bundesgymnasium and Bundesrealgymnasium Vienna III Boerhaavegasse
Higher federal boarding school 01 wiki.jpg
type of school General secondary school (grammar school)
founding 1919
address

Boerhaavegasse 15

place Vienna
state Vienna
Country Austria
Coordinates 48 ° 11 '43 "  N , 16 ° 23' 31"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 11 '43 "  N , 16 ° 23' 31"  E
carrier Republic of Austria
student 870 SJ. 2019/20
Teachers approx. 120 SJ. 2019/20
management Gabriele Eder-Lindinger
Website https://www.boerhaavegasse.at/

The Bundesgymnasium und Bundesrealgymnasium Wien III Boerhaavegasse (also Die Boerhaavegasse ) is a grammar school and secondary school with a focus on music in Boerhaavegasse 15 in the third Viennese district Landstrasse

BG and BRG Vienna III, Boerhaavegasse

history

The school was founded in 1919 by Undersecretary Otto Glöckel as one of six state educational institutions. The aim was to offer children the possibility of a non-denominational, non-military higher education regardless of their parents' class and wealth and the availability of a public school. The school building in Boerhaavegasse in the 3rd district of Vienna had previously served as a Landwehr Academy.

From 1920 onwards, constitutionally designated as the Federal Educational Institute (BEA), the school was renamed the State Educational Institute again in 1938 after Austria was annexed to Germany. Numerous teachers and educators were dismissed or transferred, Jewish pupils had to leave the school as well as all external pupils. Many boarding school students did not return to Boerhaavegasse either at the request of their parents or at their own request in September 1938, as the school was converted into a national political educational institution for girls and relocated to Hubertendorf - Türnitz . From there the remaining students and teachers fled to Bavaria in April 1945.

After the war, the concept of federal educational institutions was taken up again. After Traunsee Castle (1946) and Graz-Liebenau (1947), the Vienna III Federal Education Center also resumed operations as a boarding school in September 1948 with a new team of teachers - initially very cramped, as part of the building was still used as a hospital . It was run as an all-girls school; boys were only accepted in the 1981/82 school year.

In 1976, the four federal educational institutions were renamed the federal higher boarding schools (HIB), but remained under the Ministry of Education until the 2001/02 school year . On September 1, 2002, the former BEA or HIB Vienna III with its boarding school was transferred to the area of ​​the then City School Council for Vienna, now the Education Directorate for Vienna , and renamed the Federal High School and the Federal High School with Music Education.

The language branch will expire in the 2019/20 school year. All of the following classes are focus classes (visual, musical, dance), which require a passed aptitude test to attend.

Teachers and former teachers

Former students

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Agnes Rudda: Thanks later. Memories of the Austrian Federal Educational Institutions . Self-published n.d., Heidenreichstein, p. 184 .
  2. Stefanie Jodda-Flintrop: We should be intelligent mothers. National political educational institutions for girls 1938/39 - 1945; phil. Dissertation Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf. 2008, p. 30 , accessed December 29, 2019 .
  3. Hans Werner Scheidl: They were all at the "Bund deutscher Mädel" overnight. August 3, 2013, accessed December 29, 2019 .
  4. Jodda-Flintrop: We should be intelligent mothers. Pp. 30 - 32 , accessed December 29, 2019 .
  5. Jodda-Flintrop: We should be intelligent mothers. P. 32 , accessed December 28, 2019 .
  6. Rudda: Thanks later . S. 599 .
  7. Rudda: Thanks later . S. 655 .
  8. Designer Marcel Ostertag today at Gleisdreieck. Der Tagesspiegel, October 8, 2008, accessed on January 22, 2016 .
  9. ^ Ballet director Karl Alfred Schreiner. Retrieved December 29, 2019 .