Johann Immanuel Bossert

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Johann Immanuel Bossert (born December 21, 1742 in Tübingen ; † March 16, 1820 there ) was a Württemberg merchant and mayor of Tübingen.

Life

Johann Immanuel Bossert was a son of the coppersmith Johann Jacob Bossert and his Catholic wife Regina Eckenfelder, a daughter of the Tübingen Peruvian Johann Martin Eckenfelder. On June 7, 1774 he married Johanna Rosina Fischer (1756–1831), a daughter of the confectioner and trader and mayor of Tübingen Elias Gottfried Fischer .

In addition to his job as a trader, Bossert was a member of the council from 1775–1795 , from 1796 he rose to court, in 1798 he became mayor of Tübingen and he held these two offices until 1815. In addition, from 1799–1806 he was the ducal salt administrator .

Johann Immanuel Bossert supported the craft Sunday school founded by Carl August Zeller , which was generally enthusiastically received by the citizens of Tübingen and master craftsmen . On March 13, 1804, he took part in the first public examination with Johann Wilhelm Bopp and Johann Jacob Rehfuß as assessors . At that time Sunday schools were not only institutions for religious education, but also for a variety of theoretical further education, for training the competence for future tasks in the life of adolescents. Therefore, the Tübingen craft Sunday school offered, in addition to subject-related theory and craft practice, a part-time craft training.

At his funeral in Tübingen, Johann Christian Friedrich Steudel gave the funeral oration .

family

The Bossert couple had the following children (all born in Tübingen):

  • Elisabeth Wilhelmine Bossert (born April 11, 1775)
  • Gottfried Immanuel Friedrich Bossert (born December 22, 1776)
  • Immanuel Friedrich Bossert (born January 6, 1779)
  • Elise Rosine Bossert (born August 13, 1781)
  • Immanuel Gottlob Bossert (born December 3, 1789)

Notes and individual references

  1. ^ Ralph Kunert: Family Sermons, Association for Family and Heraldry in Württemberg and Baden eV
  2. a b Rudolf Seigel: judgment and advice ... . P. 179/180
  3. Wolfram Hauer: Local school development and urban living environment: the school system in Tübingen from its beginnings in the late Middle Ages to 1806 , Franz Steiner Verlag, 2003
  4. ^ Theodor Schott:  Steudel, Johann Christian Friedrich . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 36, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1893, pp. 152-155.
  5. ^ Family sermons that are archived in the Württemberg State Library in Stuttgart
  6. Family data of the Martinszeller family foundation: Bossert, Johannes Immanuel  ( 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: Toter Link / www.martinszeller-verband.de  

literature

  • Rudolf Seigel: Court and Council in Tübingen. From the beginnings to the introduction of the municipal constitution 1818–1822 , Stuttgart: Kohlhammer 1960 (= publication of the Commission for Historical Regional Studies in Baden-Württemberg)