Karl Hinckeldeyn
Karl Adolf Hinckeldeyn (born February 5, 1847 in Lübeck ; † May 21, 1927 there ) was a German architect and Prussian construction clerk .
Life
Karl Hinckeldeyn was the son of an art gardener from Lübeck. After graduating from high school at the Katharineum in Lübeck at Easter 1867, he studied at the Berlin Building Academy and passed the first state examination in 1872. He then took over the local management of the construction of the Berlin Hotel Kaiserhof . In 1877 he passed the 2nd state examination in architecture. After a study trip to Italy, he took over the management of the renovation of the Berlin armory as a government master builder ( assessor in the public building administration) . From 1884 he was a technical attaché at the German Embassy in Washingtondelegated. As a result of this time, he and Paul Graef published one of the first critical studies in German on architecture in the USA with Neubauten in North America in 1897 .
In 1893 Hinckeldeyn became a secret building officer , in 1894 a member of the Prussian Academy of Building and in 1896 senior building director . During this time he designed various bridges on the Dortmund-Ems Canal as an architect , including the canal bridges over the Lippe and the Stever in Olfen. In 1900 Hinckeldeyn was promoted to ministerial director, in 1903 as the first non-lawyer to ministerial director . In 1907 Hinckeldeyn became Real Privy Councilor with the address Excellency . Most recently he built the main customs office on the Hakenterrasse in Stettin (construction period 1914–1921, continued by Heinrich Osterwold from Mölln; from 1923 as state tax office ). On April 1, 1919, he resigned from the Prussian civil service and moved to his native city of Lübeck, where he died in 1927.
buildings
- 1902: Kaiser Wilhelm Library (now University Library) in Poznań (Posen)
- 1904: Kaiser Friedrich Museum (now National Museum) in Poznań (Posen)
literature
- F. Schultze: On the eightieth birthday of Karl Hinckeldeyn. In: Zentralblatt der Bauverwaltung , Volume 47, 1927, No. 7 (from February 16, 1927) , p. 57f.
- Geyer: Karl Hinckeldeyn †. In: Zentralblatt der Bauverwaltung , Volume 47, 1927, No. 25 (from June 22, 1927) , p. 303f.
- Acta Borussica, New Series, 1st row: The Protocols of the Prussian State Ministry 1817–1934/38, Volume 9: October 23, 1900 to July 13, 1909 , p. 368 ( EDOC server, Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences online ) .
- Arnold Lewis: Hinckeldeyn, Vogel, and American Architecture. In: Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 31, No. 4 (December 1972), pp. 276-290.
- Markus Tubbesing: A Prussian pioneer in the transatlantic discourse. Ministerial-Oberbaudirektor and real privy councilor Excellenz Karl Hinckeldeyn. In: Information on modern city history (IMS). ISSN 0340-1774 , edition 1/2010, pp. 54-67.
Individual evidence
- ^ "Excellency Real Privy Councilor Karl Adolf Winckeldeyn", In: Vaterstädtische Blätter , 1907
- ^ Hermann Genzken: The Abitur graduates of the Katharineum zu Lübeck (grammar school and secondary school) from Easter 1807 to 1907. Borchers, Lübeck 1907 ( digitized version ), no. 637; Friedrich Richard Krauel was his fellow high school graduate
- ↑ Construction management , Centralblatt der Bauverwaltung , March 24, 1883, p. 104, accessed on December 16, 2012
- ↑ “Die Hakenterrasse / Wały Chrobrego, Stettin” , on: Pomorze Zachodnie Travel , accessed on May 19, 2019.
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Hinckeldeyn, Karl |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Hinckeldeyn, Karl Adolf |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German architect and Prussian building officer |
DATE OF BIRTH | February 5, 1847 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Lübeck |
DATE OF DEATH | May 21, 1927 |
Place of death | Lübeck |