Johann Gottlob Trautschold

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Johann Gottl. Trautschold (born February 26, 1777 in Pößneck , † January 12, 1862 in Dresden ) was a Saxon Protestant pastor , theologian, educator and poet.

Life

Trautschold, whose first name is read both as Gottlob and Gottlieb, became a deacon in Dresden's Friedrichstadt in 1808 . In 1814 he was appointed pastor to Gröbern near Meißen and in 1824 he received a pastor's position in the parish of the church in Kötzschenbroda . Trautschold retired there in 1852 and died in 1862.

He wrote numerous sermons, spiritual songs as well as educational pamphlets.

Trautschold is referred to in the legend written down by the legend researcher Johann Georg Theodor Grasse “The strange foundation of Kötzschenbroda.” According to this, Trautschold also received that from Elector Johann Georg I to the priest Augustin Prescher during the Thirty Years' War (1618 –1648) promised 49¾ pots of wine from the electoral winery, which was now royal in Trauschold's time.

Through his participation in social life, Trauschold was acquainted with the nearby pedagogue Johann Peter Hundiker (1751-1836), to whom he dedicated some of his poems. Trautschold also wrote an occasional pamphlet on the occasion of the wedding of Hundiker's oldest granddaughter in the Kötzschenbrodaer church.

Fonts

  • The life of devotion; Second Hundred Spiritual Songs for those who like home edification. 1820. Review by Johann Friedrich Hartknoch. In: Jenaische Allgemeine Literatur-Zeitung. 1820, col. 283-285.

literature

  • Trautschold . In: Pierer's Universal Lexicon. Volume 17. Altenburg 1863, p. 773.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. according to information from the Radebeul City Archives.
  2. ^ Frank Andert: The historical portrait: Johann Peter Hundiker (1751-1836). In: Preview & Review; Monthly magazine for Radebeul and the surrounding area. Radebeuler monthly books e. V., February 2011, accessed December 26, 2013 .
  3. The life of prayer / by Johann Gottlob Trautschold. Second part. Johann Friedrich Hartknoch, Leipzig 1820.