Hugo Nauck

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One of the most famous views of Grimma: The Grimma Monastery Church and the neighboring St. Augustin High School (architect: Hugo Nauck)

Carl Hugo Nauck , occasionally also Karl Hugo Nauck , (born April 18, 1837 in Oschatz , † December 22, 1894 in Dresden ) was a German architect , senior building officer and royal Saxon master builder .

Nauck designed the building plans for local public buildings in Saxony , for example for today's St. Augustin high school in Grimma , which, together with the monastery church of Grimma, is one of the best-known views of the Mulde city.

Live and act

The St. Augustin grammar school in Grimma, designed by Hugo Nauck , the former state and princely school, from the Mulde

Hugo Nauck was the royal agricultural inspector in 1868 and lived in Dresden. In 1871 he became a district master builder in the Chemnitz administrative district with the title of senior building officer. From the second half of the 1870s Nauck worked in Leipzig. In 1882 there was a reorganization of the Royal Saxon State Building Administration under Oberlandbaumeister Carl Adolph Canzler, and Nauck, as a certified master builder in the Leipzig Landbauamt, became the highest employer there as a master builder.

Hugo Nauck was involved in the plans for important public buildings in the Kingdom of Saxony or designed them alone. This can be proven for the following buildings:

Main building Bibliotheca Albertina

Hugo Nauck was also responsible for the planning and cost-effective execution of the construction plans for Leipzig's Bibliotheca Albertina , which were created by Arwed Rossbach . The groundbreaking ceremony took place in June 1887 , the topping-out ceremony in May 1889 and the inauguration ceremony on October 24, 1891. The construction costs amounted to 2.6 million marks. The university library was named Bibliotheca Albertina after the sovereign King Albert of Saxony .

In 1891 Nauck was involved in the review of the renovation plans for the Augusteum in Leipzig , together with Oberlandbaumeister Canzler and Professor Heym from Dresden , which were approved in the same year. Most recently Hugo Nauck lived again in Dresden at Tieckstraße 23, his grave is in the Trinity cemetery . Further details can be found in the Dresden City Wiki (see web links).

publication

  • Karl Hugo Nauck: Notices about the new building of the Princely and State School in Grimma . Schiertz Publishing House, 1892

Trivia

After the decision to build a new building for the Princely School in Grimma in favor of the German Neo-Renaissance architectural style and commissioning Nauck with the planning, Nauck applied to the Board of Directors of the Landbauamt for a study trip to northern Germany in order to inspect this architectural style and the Get to know brick shell technology and wood architecture better. He received the permit and 400 marks for travel expenses. From July 12 to 25, 1886, Nauck traveled on business to Stendal , Hamburg , Kiel , Lübeck , Schwerin , Wismar , Rostock , Doberan , Stettin , Danzig , Oliva , Marienburg , Thorn , Berlin and Brandenburg and conducted his studies there.

Web links

  • Hugo Nauck in the Stadtwiki Dresden; with extensive further details

Individual evidence

  1. dresden.stadtwiki.de
  2. http://www.stadtwikidd.de/wiki/Hugo_Nauck
  3. altes-chemnitz.de
  4. ^ Wolfgang Hocquél: Leipzig. Architecture from the Romanesque to the present. Passage-Verlag, Leipzig 2010, ISBN 978-3-932900-54-9 , p. 204 ff.
  5. Jonas Flöter: The new buildings in Meißen and Grimma . In: Education for the Elite. The Princely and State Schools of Grimma, Meißen and Schulpforte around 1900 . Publication for the exhibition. Leipzig 2003, ISBN 3-937209-33-6 , pp. 25-32
  6. ^ Mario Beck: Bibliotheca Albertina: Knowledge store opened for 125 years. In: Leipziger Volkszeitung , October 18, 2016, page 14
  7. ^ LVZ online: Bibliotheca Albertina: Jubilee colloquium for the 125th birthday
  8. http://www.stadtwikidd.de/wiki/Hugo_Nauck
  9. my.name  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: dead link / my.name  
  10. Karl Irmscher: Preserved tradition . In: Friedrich Wermuth, Karl Irmscher u. a .: From the electoral state school to the St. Augustin high school in Grimma 1550–2000 . Beucha 2000, ISBN 3-930076-99-3 , pp. 23-25
  11. Jonas Flöter: The new buildings in Meißen and Grimma . In: Education for the Elite. The Princely and State Schools of Grimma, Meißen and Schulpforte around 1900 . Publication for the exhibition. Leipzig 2003, ISBN 3-937209-33-6 , pp. 25-32