Johannes Schué

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Johannes Schué with a book as a scholarly attribute and the Red Eagle Order awarded to him in 1863

Johannes Schué , spoken shoe , (born December 9, 1792 in Neumagen , † January 22, 1867 in Urexweiler ), was a Catholic theologian, philologist and headmaster. In the pre- March period he was one of the leading figures in the St. Wendel rebellion of 1831/32 in the Saxon-Coburg Principality of Lichtenberg, along with the lawyer Nikolaus Hallauer and the pastor Karl Juch .

Schué worked as a teacher in St. Wendel from 1817 . There he became the first rector of a secondary school ( Lyzeum ) founded by Duke Ernst I of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha in 1824 , a forerunner of today's Wendalinum high school , which he headed until it was converted into a three-class Progymnasium in 1854. At the now upgraded educational establishment under a new rector, Schué worked as a second full teacher until he retired in 1863. In addition, he made a name for himself as a researcher of prehistory and early history in the St. Wendel area.

Works

Honors

1863: Order of the Red Eagle (Prussian Order of Merit) 4th class

literature

  • Walter Burnikel: Johannes Schue: Portrait of an upright educator and citizen . In: Gerhard Heckmann, Michael Landau, Peter Luy (eds.): It should be the whole of Germany - political culture in St. Wendel and the Saar region 1830-1850 . (Publications of the Adolf-Bender-Zentrum eV, Association for the Promotion of Democratic Traditions, Vol. 3). St. Wendel 1992, ISBN 3-929311-00-3 , pp. 207-243 (with further literature).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Alfons Kolling: Early archaeological preservation of monuments in the St. Wendel district. In: Heimatbuch des Landkreis St. Wendel 12 (1967/68) (PDF online) , pp. 18–23, p. 21.
  2. ^ New Yearbooks for Philology and Pedagogy 88 (1863), p. 386 ( online at Google Books ).