Johann Bartholomäus Goßmann

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Johann Bartholomäus Goßmann (born September 28, 1811 in Frammersbach , † August 18, 1854 in Munich ) was a German high school teacher and author.

Life

Goßmann grew up in modest circumstances. He first attended the village school, was then prepared by a priest to visit the Würzburg college and from 1824 was a student at the grammar school in Würzburg. In 1829 he enrolled at the University of Würzburg and studied theology (among others with Johann Nepomuk Hortig), philosophy ( Andreas Metz ) and classical philology (among others with Johann Peter von Richarz ). In 1832 he passed the teaching examination and was assigned to the Würzburg grammar school as an assistant. In 1842 he was transferred to the Landau grammar school as a study teacher. In the school year 1848/49 he started in the same capacity at the Maximiliansgymnasium in Munich , where he taught Latin and German at the Latin School (lower school level). In September 1852 he was appointed grammar school professor and was simultaneously transferred to the Ludwigsgymnasium in Munich.

Goßmann was a member of the Historical Association for the Lower Main District of the Kingdom of Bavaria and married to the singer Johanna Konstanzia Goßmann, née Weinzierl (1807-1840). Son Karl Goßmann (born March 8, 1837 in Würzburg) attended the Maximiliansgymnasium in Munich from time to time. The daughters, Marie (* approx. 1835/36 in Würzburg) and Friederike Goßmann (* March 23, 1838 in Würzburg) became actresses. In his second marriage, Johann Bartholomäus Goßmann married Magdalene Goßmann (1818–1902). The children of the second marriage were Joseph (1840–1907) - he became a doctor and councilor -, Anton (1843–1862) and Fritz (1846–1876). Goßmann fell victim to the cholera epidemic in 1854 and was buried in the old southern cemetery of the city, where the family's tombstone is still preserved.

Fonts

  • Probaccorde. Seals. Printed at the author's expense by Franz Bauer, Würzburg 1830, 1831.
  • Festive poem for the fiftieth birthday and name celebration of His Majesty our beloved King Ludwig I on August 25, 1836. Written and publicly presented in the plenary meeting of the Historical Association for the Lower Main District of the Kingdom of Bavaria on August 26th by Dr. JB Gossmann, assistant and tutor at the royal. University of Applied Sciences in Würzburg, full Member of the historical association, given on the occasion of the solennen meal to the celebration intended by the resp. Club members. Wuerzburg 1836.
  • Festive poem of His Majesty our most gracious King Ludwig I. For the wedding ceremony of His Majesty King Otto I of Greece. 1836.
  • King Max I. poem in four songs. C. Ettlinger'sche Buchhandlung, Würzburg 1836.
  • The art lovers of his hometown Würzburg greeted the celebrated artist Mr. Johann Martin von Wagner at a feast held in his honor on July 16, 1837. Würzburg 1837.
  • Pilgrim's song (lyrics). Music by Joseph Küffner . 1838.
  • The singer on the mountain (text). Music by Joseph Küffner. 1838.
  • Elector Maximilian I. The hero of faith. Epic sketch of the Thirty Years War in three songs. Self-published by the author, Würzburg 1838.
  • Bavarian national song. 1840
  • Max Emanuel. Epic poem in six songs. Voigt & Mocker, Würzburg 1841.
  • Victory of the cross. Religious epic in seven songs. Voigt & Mocker, Würzburg 1841.
  • 777 Latin proverbs. For school and private use in alphabetical order and with free translation. Kaußler, Landau 1844.
  • Bad Gleisweiler and its surroundings. Represented in seven steel engravings by L. Hoffmeister and described by Johann Bartholomäus Goßmann. Kaußler, Landau 1846 (48 pages).
  • Description of the Kingdom of Bavaria for more mature pupils. Georg Joseph Manz, Regensburg 1851 (IV and 175 pages).
  • Geography textbook for Latin schools and related institutions. Georg Jos. Manz, Regensburg 1851.
  • Latin, German and Greek verse theory. G. Josef Manz, Regensburg 1853.
  • Mythology of the Greeks and Romans, the Orientelen and Northerners, for use in higher daughter schools, educational institutes and for all educated women: by JB Goßmann. Edited by J. Nolenius after his death. Georg Josef Manz, Regensburg 1859 (276 pages).

literature

  • Ignaz Hub: Germany's ballads and romances poet. From GA citizens to the very latest . Crenzbauer & Hasper, Karlsruhe 1846, pp. 674-675.
  • Franz Brümmer (Ed.): Lexicon of German poets and prose writers from the beginning of the 19th century to the present . Vol. 2. 6th edition Leipzig 1913, p. 415 .
  • Günter Steinel: Dr. Johann Bartholomäus Goßmann. Teacher and poet in Würzburg, Landau id Pfalz and Munich. For the two hundredth birthday of an important person . In: Mainfränkisches Jahrbuch für Geschichte und Kunst 63, 2011, pp. 209–230.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. M. Wirth, rector of studies (ed.): Annual report from the royal study institute in Würzburg 1825, p. 28: 1st high school class.
  2. Royal Bavarian Official and Intelligence Gazette for the Palatinate. Born in 1842. Printed by Daniel Kranzbühler, Speyer 1842, p. 301: '' By resolution of the Königl. Ministry of the Interior on April 26, 1842, Johann Bartholomäus Goßmann, a qualified teacher candidate and assistant at the grammar school in Würzburg, was appointed teacher of the first and second grade at the Latin school in Landau in a revocable capacity ''.
  3. ^ Annual report on the k. Maximilians-Gymnasium in Munich for the school year 1849/50. Munich 1850, p. 4.
  4. ^ Annual report on the k. Maximilians-Gymnasium in Munich for the school year 1852/53. Munich 1853, p. 28.
  5. ↑ Annual report on the K. Maximilians-Gymnasium in Munich for the school year 1851/52, p. 12: 1st high school class.
  6. ^ Hermann Alexander Müller (ed.): Biographisches Künstler-Lexikon, Volume 39. Verlag des Bibliographisches Institut, Leipzig 1882, p.
  7. Christina Herbst (Ed.): Hedwig Pringsheim: Diaries, Volume 3, 1898–1904. Wallstein, Göttingen 2014, p. 781.
  8. Südfriedhof Munich .