Konrad Sturmhoefel

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Konrad Hugo Sturmhoefel (born January 3, 1858 in Freiberg , † September 21, 1916 in Leipzig ) was a German historian and educator .

Life

Sturmhoefel first attended the community school in Freiberg and the Winkler private institute. He passed his Abitur at the Albertinum grammar school.

From 1877 he studied history with Wilhelm Arndt , Carl von Noorden and Georg Voigt as well as classical philology with Friedrich August Eckstein , Justus Hermann Lipsius , Ludwig Lange and Otto Ribbeck at the University of Leipzig . In 1881 he passed the state examination. Until 1884 he stayed in Hartford , Connecticut and was then employed as an assistant teacher (from 1886 senior teacher ) at the Thomas School in Leipzig . There he was later appointed professor .

In 1888 he was with the doctoral thesis Gerhoh von Reichersberg. About the moral conditions of the contemporary clergy to Dr. phil. received his doctorate and worked from then on as a lecturer at Leipzig University. He did research on Saxon (especially the Wettins ) and German history. Sturmhoefel reworked several volumes of Spamer's Illustrated World History and continued them with the historian Otto Kaemmel to the present day. He also wrote the biographical article about the Saxon-Austrian diplomat Karl Friedrich Vitzthum von Eckstädt in the Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB).

Sturmhoefel was a bearer of the Saxon War Merit Cross . On the occasion of the unveiling of the Leipzig Bismarck monument (built by Carl Seffner ) in front of the New Town Hall , on the occasion of Bismarck's 100th birthday on April 1, 1915, he gave the ceremonial speech.

Sturmhoefel died in 1916 and was buried in the New Johannisfriedhof .

Fonts

Cover of the Illustrated History of the Saxon Lands Volume 2 Division 1
  • The historical content of Gerhohs von Reichersberg I. Book about the research of the Antichrist. A. Edelmann, Leipzig 1887. (Treatise on the annual report of the Thomas School in Leipzig 1887/88)
  • Gerhoh von Reichersberg. About the moral conditions of the contemporary clergy. A. Edelmann, Leipzig 1888. (also dissertation, University of Leipzig, 1988).
  • French royal tales from the Bourbon era. As told by Konrad Sturmhoefel. With 42 woodcuts based on drawings by A. de Neuville a . a. Otto Spamer, Leipzig 1892. (2nd edition, 1899)
  • King Albert of Saxony . A picture of life. With 14 authentic illustrations. R. Voigtländer, Leipzig 1898. (= Biographical Folk Books No. 1/4)
  • Illustrated history of the Saxon lands and their rulers . 2 volumes, Hübel & Denck, Leipzig 1898/1909.
    • Volume 1: Illustrated history of the Meissnian and Thuringian lands with special consideration of cultural history .
      • Department 1: From the beginnings to the death of Frederick the Strict (1381) .
      • Department 2: From 1382 until the electoral dignity passed to the Albertines (1547) .
    • Volume 2: Illustrated history of Albertine Saxony .
      • Department 1: From 1500 to 1815 .
      • Department 2: From 1815 to 1904 .
  • How did Saxony become a kingdom? Lecture (university lectures for everyone, volume 33), Seele, Leipzig 1904.
  • German national feeling and striving for unity in the XIX. Century . 3 lectures (university lectures for everyone, volumes 36–38), Seele, Leipzig 1904.
  • Electress Anna of Saxony . A political and moral history of life from the XVI. Century . Thamm, Halle 1905. In: Ernst Haberland (ed.): Biographies of important women . Volume 5, E. Haberland, Leipzig 1905.
  • In memory of King George . An outline of his life . (With a portrait) W. Baensch, Dresden 1905.
  • The German customs union. A historical review. Publishing house for language and business studies, Berlin 1906.
  • Gustav Diestel, Otto Kaemmel (Hrsg.): Spamers illustrated world history. With special consideration of the cultural history . 5th edition, 10 volumes, Otto Spamers, Leipzig 1914.
    • Volume 1: The history of antiquity I. From the first beginnings of history to the decline of the independence of Hellas .
    • Volume 8: History of the Modern Era I. From the French Revolution of 1789 to the Austrian Campaign in 1809 .
    • Volume 9: From the beginning of the national struggle against Napoleon I to the Empire of Napoleon III. (1808-1852) .
  • Illustrated history of the most recent times . 3 volumes, Spamer, Leipzig 1914. (Edited with Otto Kaemmel)
    • Volume 1: From the French Revolution of 1789 to the Austrian Campaign in 1809 .
    • Volume 2: From the beginning of the national struggle against Napoleon I to the empire of Napoleon III. (1808-1852) .
    • Volume 3: From the accession to the throne of Napoleon III. to the present .
  • History of the German people . 2 volumes, Kröner, Leipzig 1916. (Edited with Albert Brause)
    • Volume 1: From the beginnings to the death of Frederick the Great . (= Kröner's pocket edition, Volume 19)
    • Volume 2: From the death of Frederick the Great to the outbreak of the Franco-German War (1870) . (= Kröner's pocket edition, volume 20)

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c Franz Kössler: Personal dictionary of teachers of the 19th century. Without page indication.
  2. Michael Zöller: God shows his people their ways. The theological conception of the ' Liber Scivias ' by Hildegard von Bingen (1098–1179). A. Francke, Tübingen 1997, ISBN 978-3-7720-2579-2 , p. 120. (= Tübingen studies on theology and philosophy ; Volume 11)
  3. ^ Paul Walter List: Annual Rings. Life picture of a publisher. Paul List Verlag, Munich 1982, p. 47.
  4. a b Gottlieb Tesmer, Walther Müller: Honor roll of the Thomas School in Leipzig. The teachers and high school graduates of the Thomas School in Leipzig 1912–1932. Commissioned by the Thomanerbund, self-published, Leipzig 1934, p. 17.