Karl Krickeberg

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Karl Krickeberg (1867–1944)

Karl Christian Martin Krickeberg (born July 1, 1867 in Wismar ; † September 22, 1944 in Rostock ) was a German pedagogue , theater actor , theater director , playwright and Low German writer .

Life

Karl Krickeberg was born in Wismar in 1867 as the son of the council servant Friedrich Krickeberg and his wife Marie, b. Rönnau, born. After attending the community school and the local grammar school there, he studied from 1886, first at the University of Rostock and from autumn 1887 at the Georg-August University of Göttingen, classical philology and German studies .

In 1891 he passed the state examination with a license to teach Latin and Greek. After completing his one-year military service in Wismar in 1891, he completed further training from 1892 in Greifswald and at the Marienstiftsgymnasium in Stettin and was then vice-principal at the upscale boys' school in Tribsees . From 1896 to 1898 he was director of the higher private school in Osterwieck (Harz). In 1897 he received his doctorate from the Georg August University of Göttingen with the script: Johann Micraelius : a poet of the Thirty Years' War . From 1898 to 1912 he was senior teacher for Latin, Greek, German, religion, history, geography and gymnastics at the large city school in Rostock . In 1916, now at the Realgymnasium, he was appointed high school professor and teacher.

After Richard Ohnsorg gave a guest performance in Rostock with his Dramatic Society Hamburg (from 1920 Niederdeutsche Bühne , today Ohnsorg Theater ), there was also a desire for such a theater here. In 1919 Krickeberg became the founder and director of the Low German Stage Rostock , the first in Mecklenburg. It was opened in 1920 with Hermann Boßdorf's "Bahnmeester Dod". Krickeberg wrote numerous pieces himself, in the performances of which he usually took on the leading roles. The theater has made several guest appearances in Mecklenburg and Pomerania cities. Krickeberg was on the founding board of the Low German Stage Association , which was founded in 1927. In 1940 he was honored with the John Brinckman Prize for his work .

Karl Krickeberg was married to Luise Voth, the daughter of a Wismar innkeeper. The couple had two children, the son Walter (Friedrich) Krickeberg (born June 24, 1895 in Tribsees; † 1966) and the daughter Annaliese Krickeberg (born August 22, 1896 in Osterwieck). The son became a doctor. He was in the field from 1914 until the end of the war, received his license and doctorate in Rostock in 1923 and was then an assistant doctor in Rostock. From October 1926 he was an X-ray specialist at the Bethlehem Abbey - Ludwigslust . The daughter was married to the Güstrow doctor Georg Leopold Langhans (* 1895). Walter Krickeberg's son is the statistician and stochastic Klaus Krickeberg (* 1929).

Fonts (selection)

Historical dramas
  • Charlotte Corday. Drama in four acts, Koch, Rostock 1901, first performance in 1903 at the Rostock City Theater
  • The Pharisee. Drama in four acts, Eduard Bloch, Berlin 1909
  • Hanna Pless. Play in four elevators, Hinstorff, Rostock 1920
Low German dramas
  • Anner Lüd 'Kinner: Buernkemedi in three Uptoeg. Behrend & Boldt, Rostock 1921
  • Pidder Lüng : Schauspill in dree Uptoeg (Detlev von Liliencron to'n commemoration). Reuterborn-Verlag, Rostock 1923
  • Strike: Plattdütsch Schauspill in four Uptoeg. Leopold, Rostock 1924
  • De lost 'Soehn: Plattdütsch Schauspill in 4 Uptoeg. In: Plattdeutsche Arbeitsgemeinschaft , Rostock 1927
Other fonts
  • Johann Micraelius: a poet of the Thirty Years War. Dissertation, Philosophical Faculty of the Georg-Augusts-Universität zu Göttingen, AW Zickfeldt, Osterwieck / Harz 1897 ( online )
  • Speech at the Schiller Celebration of the Great City School on May 9, 1905, given by senior teacher Dr. K. Krickeberg. Boldt, Rostock 1906 (= supplement to the annual report of the Rostock grammar school and secondary school, Easter 1906) ( digitized version )
  • The drama on the Rostock stage in 25 years. In: Festschrift of the Rostock City Theater. 1920, pp. 7-20
  • The city theater in Rostock. In: Rostock Spring Week from February 26 to March 5, 1922 , pp. 63–68.
  • The old school desk: a chat. In: Mecklenburgische Monatshefte , Schwerin 1935, Vol. 11, pp. 84ff. ( Digitized version )
  • Mecklenburg folk types in Low German short stories. In: Mecklenburgische Monatshefte , Schwerin 1937, vol. 13, p. 429ff. ( Digitized version )

Radio plays

literature

  • Grete Grewolls: Who was who in Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania. The dictionary of persons . Hinstorff Verlag, Rostock 2011, ISBN 978-3-356-01301-6 , p. 5429 f .
  • Johannes Gosselck : Karl Krickeberg. In: Mecklenburgische Monatshefte , Schwerin 1925, Vol. 1, pp. 51–53. ( Digitized version )
  • Theodor Struck: Visit to Professor Krickeberg - The winner of the John Brinckman Prize for new works. In: Mecklenburgische Monatshefte , Schwerin 1941, Vol. 17, pp. 47-48. ( Digitized version )
  • Julius Becker: Krickeberg, Professor Dr. Karl Christian Martin. In: Walther Neumann (ed.): The large city school in Rostock in 3 1/2 centuries: an anniversary publication , Boldt, Rostock 1930, pp. 137-138 ( digitized version )

Primary literature

  • Karl Krickeberg: Johann Micraelius: a poet of the thirty years' war. Dissertation, Göttingen 1897, see writings, here: curriculum vitae pp. 75–76

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Entry winter semester 1886/1887, No. 66 in the Rostock matriculation portal
  2. ^ Blanck / Wilhelmi / Willgeroth: Die Mecklenburgischen Dozte. Schwerin 1929, pp. 104/138.
  3. Entry summer semester 1916, No. 57 in the Rostock matriculation portal
  4. Klaus Krickeberg. ( Memento from September 16, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) In: Dagmar Drüll: Heidelberger Gelehrtenlexikon , Heidelberg 2009, Vol. 3, 1933–1986, pp. 360–361 ( limited preview in the Google book search)
  5. Low German Stage Rostock as a guest in the Wismar Theater. In: Wismar-Zeitung , 9/11, May 19, 2011