Joseph Hengesbach

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Joseph Hengesbach (born March 15, 1860 in Bad Fredeburg ; † January 6, 1940 ) was a Catholic publicist .

Career

The son of a businessman attended secondary school in Fredeburg and from 1875 to 1877 the Carolinum grammar school in Osnabrück and the grammar school in Attendorn . He graduated from high school in 1880. He then studied philosophy for four semesters at the University of Münster and three semesters at the University of Marburg . In Münster he attended lectures by Professors Gustav Körting , Peter Langen (1835–1897), Gideon Spicker and Wilhelm Storck .

With his contribution to the theory of the dip in the Provencal Hengesbach was in 1885 at the University of Marburg in Romanisten Prof. Edmund Max Stengel Dr. phil. PhD . In addition to his work as a high school teacher, Hengesbach worked for the reform-oriented Catholic magazine Hochland . Hengesbach was an opponent of the integralists during an intra-Catholic literary dispute that ran roughly parallel to the central dispute after the turn of the century .

Works (selection)

  • Contribution to the doctrine of inclination in Provençal , dissertation, 1885
  • Readings of Shakespeare: Illustrative of the poet's art, plots, and characters ; a reading book for secondary schools, Heyfelder, 1901
  • France in its social and political life , Eugen Diederichs Verlag, 1915
  • Exercise pieces to translate into French for the upper level of higher educational institutions , Weidmann, 1929

editor

  • from 1876 he was editor of the collection of French and English writers
  • From 1894 he was with the teacher Leopold Bahlsen (1860-1936), the school library French and English prose writings of modern times out
  • For the series Westfälische Lebensbilder Hengesbach wrote the portrait of the Protestant educator and politician Julius Ostendorf (1823–1877).

literature

Individual proof

  1. ^ Joseph Hengesbach, Library for Research on the History of Education , accessed on October 7, 2012.