Heinrich Feesche

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Otto Armknecht - Lutheran Gold , Confessions, Hanover, 1910, Verlag Heinrich Feesche; Artist signature : C. Wenzel

Heinrich Feesche was the name of a publisher and an assortment bookstore in Hanover , in which mainly theological writings and so-called "Hanover books" as well as postcards appeared.

history

In the publishing house Heinr. Feesche moved postcard "Feierabendhaus lozenge, Marienheim" the Henriettenstiftung in the southern part of Hanover;
around 1900, collotype

The bookbinder Heinrich Feesche the Elder (* May 25, 1837, † 1890) founded nor the time of the Kingdom of Hanover in 1865 in his early residence of Hannover a range bookstore publishing. The company founder, who was influenced by the Hermannsburg mission , built up a largely theological range. Heinrich Feesche the Elder was the father of the bookseller Friedrich Ludwig Feesche (* May 23, 1866 in Hanover; † March 6, 1931 there), who later continued the company, and who, according to the local researcher Erich Rosendahl, has the reputation of a "gifted lyricist" Marie Feesche (1871–1950).

As the son of Friedrich Ludwig Feesche , Heinrich Feesche the Younger (born January 4, 1914 in Hanover; † February 8, 1990 there) continued the family business until it closed in 1988 for reasons of age.

Fonts (selection)

  • Heinrich Möller : Sermon at the opening of the ninth regular regional synod on May 8, 1917 / go. Von Möller (12 pages in Gothic script ), Hanover: Feesche, 1917
  • The Heinr. Feesche presents new books , directory with description, 16 pages, Hanover: Heinr. Feesche, around 1932

Literature (selection)

Web links

Commons : Heinrich Feesche  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c Hugo Thielen : FEESCHE, Heinrich. In: Dirk Böttcher , Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein, Hugo Thielen: Hannoversches Biographisches Lexikon . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2002, ISBN 3-87706-706-9 , p. 115; online through google books
  2. Compare this reverse to a picture postcard from the publisher's range