Herbord Karl Friedrich Bienemann from Bienenstamm

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Herbord Karl Friedrich Bienemann von Bienenstamm (born August 26, 1778 in Libau , † April 26, 1840 in Riga ) was a German-Baltic farmer, publicist and geographer.

Life

Herbord Karl Friedrich came from the German-Baltic Bienemann von Bienenstamm family , who were nobilized in 1794 by the imperial aristocracy and who also received Baltic nobility recognition in 1797. His father was the landowner and district marshal Peter von Bienemann von Bienenstamm; his mother Sophia Margaretha geb. Jacobs came from Mitau . From 1793 to 1797 he attended the Gymnasium zum Grauen Kloster in Berlin and studied at the University of Göttingen in 1797/98 .

In July 1798 he delivered himself to the stud. jur. Ernst Anton Burggraf (1777–1848) a duel on pistols near Hannoversch Münden , in which the Burggraf was wounded. Both duelists were punished with relegation by the University Council .

Since at the same time Tsar Paul I of Russia ordered the return of all student subjects from German universities, he returned to his parents' house for three years. As a farmer he managed the goods Pleppen (1802-1816) near Aizpute (German Hasenpoth ) and Misshof and Huebbenetshof in Courland (1819-1826). He bought an extensive library.

However, endangered by the pressures of the times and some circumstances in his prosperity , he had to sell his goods. In 1824 he moved to Riga, where he initially lived in unwilling leisure .

From 1826 he was active as a journalist. In 1826/27 and 1830–1833 he published the non-political newspaper for German-Russia , which appeared weekly and paid particular attention to the Riga theater. After the death of Superintendent General Karl Gottlob Sonntag , he was editor of the Rigaische Stadtblätter from 1828 to 1830 .

In 1832 he opened a private secondary school for girls .

Fonts

  • Geographical outline of the three German Baltic Sea provinces of Russia, or the Governments [!] Ehst-, Liv- and Kurland . Riga: Deubner, 1826
  • New geographical-statistical description of the imperial-Russian governorate of Courland, or the former duchies of Courland and Zemgale with the Pilten pen . Reviewed by EA Pentecost. In addition to the colored plans of the cities of Mitau, Libau and Windau and a colored map of Courland. Mitau and Leipzig: GA Reyher, 1841

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ernst Anton Burggraf in New Nekrolog der Deutschen , Volume 26, 1848, Part 1, Weimar 1850, p. 414, No. 96
  2. ^ Stefan Brüdermann : Göttingen students and academic jurisdiction in the 18th century. (= Göttinger Universitätsschriften: 15) Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht 1990 ISBN 9783525358467 , p. 200; Johann Gottfried Eichhorn : Vniversitatis Georgiae Avgvstae Prorector Io. Godfr. Eichhorn Cvm Senatv Exspectari quidem poterat ... Herbertvs Carolvs Fridericvs Bienemann De Bienenstamm Libaviensis Livonvs Et Ernestvs Antonivs Bvrggraf Hannoveranvs ... , Göttingen 1798 ( decision of relegation)
  3. ^ Johann Friedrich von Recke and Karl Eduard Napiersky : General Lexicon of Writers and Scholars of the Provinces of Livonia, Esthland and Courland , Volume 1, Mitau: Steffenhagen 1827 ( digitized version ), p. 172 f.
  4. Riga Theater and Tonkünstler Lexicon: together with the history of the Riga theater and the musical society. Riga: Kymmel 1890, p. 21