Johann Ludwig Friedrich Ede

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Johann Ludwig Friedrich Ede (born January 1, 1802 in Hanover ; † May 1, 1859 there ) was a German entrepreneur , purveyor to the court and Freemason .

Life

Only after the invention of photography was one of the earliest documentary photographs in the history of Hanover taken in 1859 , here at the same time from the last trade exhibition in the Kingdom of Hanover in the year Edes died;
Originator ; Court photographer Eugen Lulves .

As a descendant of Friedrich Ede , who had already founded a soap factory in Hanover in 1787 , Johann Ludwig Friedrich Ede was born during the time of the Electorate of Hanover in the royal seat of Hanover, long orphaned by the personal union between Great Britain and Hanover. As a child experienced Ede the so-called " French period " in his hometown before it later became the seat of government of the Kingdom of Hanover by King Ernst August and his son George V was.

On December 31, 1831, Ede's son Constantin Theodor Friedrich Ede was born.

When the trade association for the Kingdom of Hanover , founded in the course of industrialization , held its first trade exhibition in the kingdom in May 1835 in the Leineschloss , the soap maker Friedrich Ede was also present with his soap products made from soda , coconut , ash and potash, as well as from tallow and from the head of the sperm whale produced spermazeti - candles among the exhibitors. After taking over the Ede soap and light factory, Johann Ludwig Friedrich Ede also supplied the Hanoverian royal court.

Johann Ludwig Friedrich Ede was admitted to the Masonic lodge Zum Schwarzen Bär on June 9, 1840 , and his son, almost 15 years later, to the same lodge on January 9, 1855.

Honors

  • Edenstrasse, laid out in 1854 in what is now the List district , was named after Johann Ludwig Friedrich Ede and his son.

See also

Remarks

  1. Possibly as a printing error in the Freemason scriptures, the Edenstrasse facility was given as the year "1954"
  2. Deviating from this, the address book of the city of Hanover from 1942 only mentions “ the soap boiler Ede” as the namesake of Edenstrasse, compare this scan of the address book

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g Siegfried Schildmacher, Winfried Brinkmann, Edzard Bakker, Peter Rosenstein (Red.): Johann Ludwig Friedrich Ede. In Siegfried Schildmacher (Ed.): In the footsteps of the Freemasons - a walk through the streets of Hanover. Self-published, Hannover 2015, p. 53
  2. ^ Carl-Hans Hauptmeyer : 1787. In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein: Hannover Chronik . Schlütersche, Hannover 1991, ISBN 3-87706-319-5 , p. 104, online via Google books
  3. ^ Nomen nominandum : Directory at the first exhibition of domestic industrial products organized by the trade association for the Kingdom of Hanover , Hanover, May 1835, Gebrüder Jänecke (print), p. 109; Digitized