Heinrich Youngest
Bernhard Heinrich Jüngst (born April 7, 1825 in Lingen im Emsland ; † March 23, 1918 in Hanover ) was a Royal Hanoverian officer and later a Royal Prussian lieutenant colonel as well as an architect , garrison builder and real secret council in the Prussian War Ministry .
Life
family
Heinrich Jüngst was born as the eldest son and second child of Christian Gottfried Jüngst (1795–1869) and Georgine Wilhelmine Croupp (1803–1892). He was the older brother of the later mill director Carl Jüngst and the peat entrepreneur Wilhelm Jüngst (1827-1892). His cousin was the writer Antonie Jüngst , his uncle the teacher Ludwig Volrath Jüngst . Henry is a great-grandson of law professor Wolrad Burchardi , a Ururururururururgroßenkel the anatomist, physician, mathematician and astronomer Johann Dryander and of university lecturer and lawyer Joseph Lorich , a Urururururururururgroßenkel the lawyer Ludwig Furster (1487-before 1529), himself the son of Marburg Mayor Heinrich Furster (around 1452 – after 1515) and Margarethe von Hessen, illegitimate daughter of Ludwig II and his mistress Margarethe von Holzheim (around 1443 – after 1515). He was also a great, great, great grandson of the orientalist and theologian Johann Joachim Schröder , a great, great, great grandson of the rector Christoph Combach (* around 1590), brother of Johannes Combach and Ludwig Combach , a great, great, great grandson of the philosopher and professor Nikolaus Berthold (1630-1687) and the theologian Philipp Otto Vietor , a Urururururururgroßenkel the theologian Heinrich Salmuth , a Urururururururururgroßenkel the theologian Johann Pfeffinger , a Ururururururururgroßenkel the theologian Wolfgang Harder the family recently is up to the beginning of the 15th century detectable, as the progenitor Hans Jongsten (* 1444), the son of from Netphen native hen Berchmann was born.
Career
In 1860 Heinrich Jüngst, at that time a captain in the Royal Hanoverian Engineers Corps , was subordinate to the Ober-Hof-Marshal-Amt under Carl Ernst Unico Ernst von Malortie , which was set up in the royal seat of the Kingdom of Hanover , just like the court construction officials Georg Ludwig Friedrich Laves , Georg Heinrich Schuster , Justus Jacob Molthan , Heinrich Tramm and Richard Auhagen or the war builder Hermann Hunaeus .
On October 6, 1860 he was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Guelph Order as a Hanoverian captain, first class, as the only officer in the Hanoverian army in the captain's or cavalry level .
Works (selection)
Fonts
- Heinrich Hunaeus, Heinrich Jüngst: The General Military Hospital in Hanover , in: Journal of the Architects and Engineers Association in Hanover , Hanover 1929, pp. 21–24
buildings
- Hanover, barracks on Welfenplatz ;
- 1858–1860, on the north side of the square, preserved: Infantry barracks Am Welfenplatz 2 , today the police station. The preserved right wing, an originally symmetrically arranged group of three fort-like , " close combat " buildings were executed in the flat arched style of the Berlin school. The Hannover Historical Museum is in possession of a colored lithograph from around 1870, which shows the situation at the then "[...] extreme northern city limits in an almost free field".
- 1867–1870, on the east side of the square: barracks for mounted artillery , with extensive stables; At Welfenplatz 1A , later Protection Police Inspection III with a cavalry squadron . The building was built in the same style as the barracks on the north side, but is more based on the Hanover architecture school .
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d Helmut Knocke , Hugo Thielen : Welfenplatz , in Dirk Böttcher , Klaus Mlynek (ed.): Hannover. Art and Culture Lexicon , new edition, 4th, updated and expanded edition, Springe: zu Klampen, 2007, ISBN 978-3-934920-53-8 , p. 217
- ↑ a b c Heike Bund: Ortsfamilienbuch Lingen / Familienbericht / Bernhard Heinrich Jüngst on the website of the Verein für Computergenealogie in the version of December 28, 2016, last accessed on May 17, 2017
- ↑ Günter Bauhoff: Recently, Carl. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 10, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1974, ISBN 3-428-00191-5 , p. 646 f. ( Digitized version ).
- ^ Heike Bund: Ortsfamilienbuch Lingen / Familienbericht / Henne Berchmann on the website of the Verein für Computergenealogie in the version of December 28, 2016, last accessed on May 17, 2017
- ^ Dorothea von Chamisso de Boncourt: History of the youngest family . 2004
- ^ Günter Kokkelink , Harold Hammer-Schenk (Ed.): From the castle to the train station: Building in Hanover. For the 200th birthday of the court architect G. L. F. Laves, 1788–1864. An exhibition by the State of Lower Saxony, Institute for the History of Architecture and Art of the University of Hanover and the State Capital Hanover, Historical Museum. Exhibition in the forum of the Landesmuseum Hannover from October 13, 1988 to January 8, 1989, Institut für Bau- u. Art history of the University of Hannover, Historisches Museum Hannover, 1988, ISBN 3-88746-223-8 , pp. 59–62; here: p. 61
- ^ A b Franz Rudolf Zankl (Hrsg.): List of architects , compiled with the collaboration of Helmut Zimmermann , in this: Hanover. From the old train station to the new town hall. Pictorial documents on urban development in the second half of the 19th century , exhibition guide of the Historisches Museum am Hohen Ufer, Hanover, 1975, p. 42f.
Web links
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Recently, Heinrich |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Most recently, Bernhard Heinrich |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Royal Hanoverian, later Prussian officer, German architect |
DATE OF BIRTH | April 7, 1825 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Lingen |
DATE OF DEATH | March 23, 1918 |
Place of death | Hanover |