Julius nose

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Julius Nase (born October 19, 1861 in Kamen ; † November 29, 1946 in Hiddesen ) was pastor in the Protestant parish of Birkelbach and Wittgensteiner local historian.

Life

Nase came as the son of the wheelwright Wilhelm Nase and his wife Karoline Amalie, nee. Höning, to the world. After attending grammar school in Burgsteinfurt , he studied Protestant theology at the universities of Leipzig , Greifswald and Bonn from 1880 . He finished his studies in 1883 with the first exam in Münster. Two years later, he also took his second exam at the consistory in Münster. On February 2, 1887, he was ordained in the Protestant parish of Birkelbach ( Wittgenstein church district ) and introduced as pastor. He looked after the community of Birkelbach for four decades until March 31, 1928. On June 14, 1889, he married the landlord's daughter Amalie Grafer in Volmarstein .

Services

The focus of Nase's theological work was in the area of ​​youth work with catechumens and confirmation classes as well as Christian teaching. In addition, he used his diverse medical and historical interests for the common good. From the beginning he was active in the Association for History and Archeology of Wittgenstein and campaigned intensively for the preservation and care of the historical heritage of the region. Together with pastor colleagues Friedrich Wilhelm Winckel and Johann Georg Hinsberg , who are better known today , Nase is one of Wittgenstein's most important modern local historians in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, who did their source-critical work using archival documents. Of particular value is his unpublished, particularly thoroughly worked chronicle of the Birkelbach parish, on which every recent publication about the parish is based.

Selected works

  • The Reformation in Wittgenstein and its sponsors , published in 23 parts in: Evangelical Church Sunday sheet for Siegerland and Wittgenstein, numbers 18–41 (1905).
  • A gold maker in the Wittgensteiner Land ( Johann Conrad Dippel ). In: Communications of the Association for History and Folklore Wittgenstein 2 (1914), pp. 19–24 and 44–48.
  • A poem of praise for the city of Berleburg (by Pastor Philipp Nicolai, 1654). In: Communications of the Association for History and Folklore Wittgenstein 6 (1923), p. 32.
  • Julius Nase and Heinrich Lhotzky : Das Nibelungenlied, the runesong of the German thought , vol. 1 (vol. 2 not published), Stuttgart 1927.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Archives of the Evangelical Church District Wittgenstein, Parish Birkelbach 39