Karin Dengler-Schreiber

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Karin Dengler-Schreiber (* 1947 in Bamberg ) is a German historian and writer .

Life

Karin Dengler-Schreiber attended the grammar school of the English Misses in Bamberg. She then studied history, art history and literature in Würzburg and Vienna . She did her doctorate in Würzburg under Otto Meyer with a thesis on the medieval manuscripts of the Michelsberg monastery for Dr. phil. As a historian, she has been intensively researching the history of Bamberg for years.

In 1983 she was elected honorary home nurse of the city of Bamberg. She held this office for over 26 years and only gave it to her successor, the art historian Ekkehard Arnetzl, at her own request in 2009. As part of her work as home nurse, she campaigned for the many monuments in the city of Bamberg. Thanks to their efforts, numerous buildings were saved from demolition and now shape the cityscape. Two examples of this are the “German House”, in which the city library is located today, and the “brick building” next to the concert and congress hall.

In 1997 Karin Dengler-Schreiber was appointed to the State Monument Council , which advises the Bavarian State Government on monument issues, and was elected its deputy chairman in 1999.

From 2008 to 2011 she was responsible for the world heritage management of the city of Bamberg.

Karin Dengler-Schreiber lives with her husband and three sons in Bamberg.

Book author

Karin Dengler-Schreiber has written numerous books on the history and preservation of monuments in the city of Bamberg. Under the pseudonym Anna Degen Dengler-Schreiber publishes detective novels in Bamberg.

Honors

Works

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Information from the Office of the Federal President