Hugo Hagendorff

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hugo Hagendorff (born October 23, 1813 in Graudenz , † April 17, 1860 in Berlin ) was a German writer .

Life

Born the son of a post office clerk, Hagendorff studied camera science in Berlin from 1832 to 1835 after attending grammar school in Zeitz . During his studies in 1832 he became a member of the old Berlin fraternity Allemannia . After the banned fraternity was discovered by the authorities, he was arrested and interrogated in 1834. After making a confession, he was released, but was suspended from the university for the summer semester of 1834 and only received a serious warning at the end of the investigation due to a cabinet order in 1835 . After graduating, he worked in Berlin. He was active as a writer.

Publications (selection)

  • Together with Rudolf Gernstein: Poems. With a musical accompaniment. Berlin 1835.
  • The Mähr vom Hörnen Siegfried. Zeitz 1837.
  • Ephemeral short stories and short stories. Zeitz 1838.
  • Together with August Conradi : A polka cure. Posse with singing. Berlin 1848.
  • Together with Carl Lindow: Constitution or Monarchy? An open word to the citizen and farmer. Berlin 1852.
  • Signpost through the Prussian Rhine Province, Westphalia and the Duchy of Nassau. Berlin 1858.
  • Borussia. Ballads and legends from East and West Prussia. Berlin 1859.
  • The Soolbad Kösen along with the banks of the Saal and the nearest towns. A guide for bathers. Berlin 1859. ( digitized version )
  • The Swedes before Zeitz. Zeitz 1923.

literature

  • Helge Dvorak: Biographical Lexicon of the German Burschenschaft. Volume II: Artists. Winter, Heidelberg 2018, ISBN 978-3-8253-6813-5 , pp. 285–286.

Web links