Hans Havemann

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hans Havemann (born May 5, 1887 in Grabow , Mecklenburg-Schwerin , † September 23, 1985 in Berlin ) was a German writer, journalist and geologist .

Hans Havemann was the eighth and last child of a Grabow seed trader. Hans' sister Margarete was considered a "seasoned painter" and was married to the artist Georg Braumüller, while his sister Hedwig was married to the writer Albert Sergel .

Havemann received his doctorate in Munich in 1911, and from 1914 to 1924 he was a high school teacher in Bielefeld . From 1926 Havemann was the features editor of the Westfälische Neuesten Nachrichten . In 1933 he joined the NSDAP and became the chief editor of this newspaper. After the war , Havemann published articles in the Berlin magazine "Sonntag" under the pseudonym Hans Grabow . From 1946 he worked at the German Academy of Sciences in the field of geology. In 1985 he was awarded the Einstein Medal of the Academy.

Hans Havemann was married to the painter Elisabeth von Schönfeldt (1874–1959) for the first time. Their children were Robert and Hans Erwin (1911–1943). The mother taught art history at the crafts and arts and crafts school in Bielefeld .

Hans Havemann was buried next to his first wife in the Borgsdorf cemetery.

Works

  • The epistemological point of view of Condillacs . Dissertation . Jena 1912.
  • Charles Baudelaire : The rejected one . Hanover 1920. (Adaptations by Hans Havemann)
  • Last Judgment. The tragedy of the original AEIOU . Hanover 1921. (under the pseudonym Jan van Mehan ); New edition by Jan van Mehan [d. i. Hans Havemann]: Last Judgment. The tragedy of the original AEIOU . (= FR Shooter. Booklet 8). Edited by Walter Fähnders. Verlag Peter Ludewig, Munich 2008, ISBN 978-3-9810572-5-6 .
  • The distress in Calais . Hanover 1923.
  • The image of man. Human and all in the light of a philosophy of space . Jena 1937.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Harold Hurwitz: Robert Havemann - A personal-political biography. Part 1 - The beginnings . Entenfuß Verlag, 2012, Berlin.

Web links