Johann Carl Heinrichs

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Johann Carl Conrad Heinrichs (born July 20, 1793 in Friedland (Mecklenburg) , † April 19, 1855 there ) was a German educator and Lutheran clergyman.

Life

Johann Carl Heinrichs, son of a master rope maker , attended the learned school in Friedland. Then he began his theology studies at the University of Berlin. He became a member of the Corps Vandalia I Berlin in 1813 and heard from Friedrich Schleiermacher . In 1813 he became a member of the Lützow Freikorps , where he, as a friend of Friedrich Ludwig Jahns, wrote down his defense messages at the sick camp after his dictation . In 1814 he continued his studies at the University of Jena and initially became a member of the Corpsland Team Vandalia Jena. In 1815 he was one of the Jenenser Vandals, who founded the original fraternity and, as a close friend of Heinrich Arminius Riemann, wrote the fraternity document ( constitution ), the original of which has been lost but two copies have been preserved.

Heinrichs finished his studies in Berlin in 1815/1816 and initially worked as a private tutor for the Berlin family in his hometown. In 1817 he got a position as vice rector at the grammar school in Friedland and in 1818 became its rector.

Ruin of the Nikolaikirche in Friedland

In 1819 Heinrichs was pastor of the Nikolaikirche (ruin since 1945) in Friedland and in 1839 a preposition of his Sprengels . In Friedland, too, he had a lifelong friendship with his companion Riemann; At the same time as Heinrichs, Riemann was his colleague at the Marienkirche in Friedland and describes the death of his friend Heinrichs in his town history in Friedland.

literature

  • Helge Dvorak: Biographical Lexicon of the German Burschenschaft. Volume 1: Politicians. Sub-Volume 2: F-H. Winter, Heidelberg 1999, ISBN 3-8253-0809-X , p. 284.
  • Friedrich Heinrich Ranke : Visit to Johann Carl Heinrichs in Friedland . In: Jugenderinnerungen mit Blick auf das Later Leben , 1886, pp. 117–118.
  • Peter Kaupp [edit.]: Stamm-Buch of the Jenaische Burschenschaft. The members of the original fraternity 1815–1819. (= Treatises on student and higher education ; Vol. 14). SH-Verlag, Cologne 2005. ISBN 3-89498-156-3 . P. 24.
  • Georg Krüger: The pastors in Stargard since the Reformation . In: Year books of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology, vol. 69 (1904), pp. 1–270.
  • Grete Grewolls: Who was who in Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania. The dictionary of persons . Hinstorff Verlag, Rostock 2011, ISBN 978-3-356-01301-6 , p. 4023 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener Corps Lists 1910 , 17 , 13
  2. ^ Kösener corps lists 1910, 130 , 53