Karl Eberhard

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Karl Gottlieb Eberhard (born February 22, 1820 in Elstra ; † April 10, 1907 in Dresden ) was a German architect and royal building officer .

Life

Lindengasse 6, a residential building of Eberhard

Eberhard was born in Elstra as the son of master mason Karl Gottlieb Eberhard. He went to Dresden, where he learned the mason trade at the building trade school. At the Easter test of the building trade school in 1844, Eberhard was honored with the bronze medal, the highest award given in the year. He became a master bricklayer and received Dresden citizenship in July 1848. He lived, listed in the address book of the city of Dresden as an architect and master bricklayer, not far from the Annenkirche at the address Poppitz  23. In October 1848 he married Emma Elisabeth Donath in the Annenkirche.

Eberhard was a representative of the Semper Nicolai School and was considered "artistically outstanding". He created most of his work in Dresden. Around 1865 he was made an honorary member of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts , and from 1882 he traded under the name of " master builder " or architect and master builder. In the late 1880s, Eberhard moved into the tenement building at Lindengasse 6 and lived a little later and until his death in the house at Lindengasse 26.

Around 1891 he was appointed royal building officer. Eberhard died widowed in Dresden in 1907 and was buried in the Old Annenfriedhof .

Buildings and designs

  • 1854: 1st secondary school in Dresden Neustadt (destroyed in 1945)
  • 1857/1859: Superintendent building at the Dresden Kreuzkirche (demolished in 1907)
  • 1866/1867: Villa Häbler , Beuststraße 2 (destroyed in 1945)
  • 1868/1869: Villa Parkstrasse 6 (destroyed in 1945)
  • 1869: Saxon Bank in Dresden , Schloßstraße / Große Brüdergasse (renovation of the Hôtel de Pologne )
  • 1869/1870: Villa Goethestrasse 1 (destroyed in 1945)
  • 1869/1870: Villa Goethestrasse 6 (destroyed in 1945)
  • 1876/1877: State bank in Bautzen, branch in Dresden (broken off in 1904)

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Register: Architects. In: Dresden-und-Sachsen.de. Retrieved April 10, 2013 .
  2. News about the building trade school . In: Program for the exams to be taken on March 15, 16, 17, 18 and 19 with the students of the Technical Training Institute and the Building Trade School in Dresden . Teubner, Dresden 1845, p. 80.
  3. Dresden Journal . No. 135, August 13, 1848, p. 1064.
  4. ↑ In 1849 and 1850 the address books incorrectly list it under the spelling “Eberhardt, CG”, cf. Address manual for the city of Dresden , 1849, p. 20.
  5. Church weekly papers, 1685 / 1703-1902 . City Archives of the State Capital Dresden, Dresden, Germany. via ancestry.com, accessed January 25, 2019.
  6. a b c d e f g h Volker Helas: Architecture in Dresden 1800–1900 . Verlag der Kunst, Dresden 1991, p. 194.
  7. ^ First entry of the title in the Dresden address book from 1866. See address and business manual of the royal capital and residence city of Dresden , 1866, p. 46.
  8. ^ Address and business manual of the royal residence and capital Dresden , 1882, p. 69.
  9. ^ Housing and business handbook of the royal residence and capital Dresden , 1892, p. 107.
  10. death survey . In: Otto Richter (Ed.): Dresdner Geschichtsblätter , No. 2. Wilhelm Baensch, Dresden 1902, p. 248.