Johann Georg Bartholmä

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Johann Georg Bartholmä (born November 29, 1805 in Oettingen in Bavaria , † May 29, 1839 in Munich ) was a German writer .

Life

Born as the son of a master furrier, Bartholmä studied Protestant theology in Erlangen . During his studies in 1825 he became a member of the old Erlanger fraternity Germania . He passed his first theological exam in Ansbach in 1829 and was ordained in 1831 . He made his second exam in 1833. In 1833 he became provisional administrator of the parish of Markt Taschendorf , in 1834 private vicar in Laubendorf and in 1835 vicar in Würzburg and Ansbach. He has been suspended from office several times for debts , alcoholism, and "incidents of women." From 1836 he lived in Ansbach as a private person and in 1837 voluntarily resigned from the clerical office in order to escape a disciplinary investigation . He left the church and lived in Munich from 1837, where he became Dr. phil. received his doctorate . Shortly before his death, he became a Catholic .

Publications (selection)

  • The high song of Solomonis: In forty three minne songs from the 13th and 14th centuries; together with the necessary explanations. Nuremberg, Leipzig 1827.
  • The miracle girl in Sammenheim. Nordlingen 1827.
  • Notes on the current state of clergy and religion. Nuremberg 1828.
  • The Lord's Prayer: A Homilistic Sketch. Nuremberg 1829.
  • Two dramatic attempts. Nuremberg 1829.
  • The apogryphs of the New Testament. Dinkelsbühl 1832.
  • Proserpine: apparitions from the depths of human life. Wuerzburg 1835.
  • Songs of love for the educated. Dinkelsbühl 1836. ( Online )
  • Hallelujah: Morning and evening devotions on weekdays and holidays in chants In Witschel's manner. Dinkelsbühl 1836.
  • Ideas for the transformation of the general poor of Germany into general industrial establishments of every state, based on the existing ordinances of the Kingdom of Bavaria. Dissertation University of Munich, Berlin 1837.
  • Hierophantia: a didactic poem. Ansbach 1837.
  • The merciful sisters in Munich in relation to nursing: a voice for our time. Augsburg 1838.
  • Is Christianity Really Perfectible? A letter to Professor Dr. Krug in Leipzig as a contribution to the apologetics of Christianity. Augsburg 1839. ( Online )

literature

  • Helge Dvorak: Biographical Lexicon of the German Burschenschaft. Volume II: Artists. Winter, Heidelberg 2018, ISBN 978-3-8253-6813-5 , pp. 37-38.
  • Friedrich Clemens Ebrard : Johann Georg Bartholmä 1805–1839; his life, his writing and his comical student epic "The Knights of the Night". Erlangen 1926.