Lever-Gymnasium Pforzheim
Lever-Gymnasium Pforzheim | |
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Hebel-Gymnasium with its schoolyard (June 2011) | |
type of school | high school |
address |
Simmlerstrasse 1 |
place | Pforzheim |
country | Baden-Württemberg |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 48 ° 53 '25 " N , 8 ° 41' 36" E |
carrier | City of Pforzheim |
student | 1069 (as of October 21, 2009) |
Teachers | 83 (as of October 21, 2009) |
management | Bernhard Steger |
Website | www. Hebel-pf.de |
The Hebel-Gymnasium is the largest of five general education, municipal high schools in Pforzheim . It was named after the Baden dialect poet Johann Peter Hebel (1760–1826).
The Hebel-Gymnasium offers its students three profiles: linguistic, musical and scientific.
history
The Oberrealschule ("Friedrichschule"), which was inaugurated on July 28, 1911 and was destroyed on February 23, 1945 , stood on the site of what is now the Hebel Gymnasium . After the war, the reconstruction of the school building, which today houses the Hebel-Gymnasium, changed significantly. Since the neighboring Reuchlin-Gymnasium was not rebuilt, it was a guest at the Hebel-Gymnasium from 1948 to 1968.
In 1976, the Hebel-Gymnasium was divided into Hebel I and Hebel II, which later became the Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium . Until the 1978/79 school year, Dieter Lang still headed both high schools.
exchange
School exchanges are maintained with Czestochowa (Poland), Nevşehir (Turkey), Amersfoort (Netherlands) and Albacete (Spain).
Well-known former students
- Jürgen Elsässer (* 1957), journalist, publicist and political activist
- Freia Hoffmann (* 1945), musicologist and professor
- Bastian Rosenau (* 1980), politician and district administrator
- Harald Schuh (* 1956), geodesist and professor
- Klaus Spürkel (1948–2016), actor and radio play speaker