Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium Neustadt

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium
2009-KRG-NW.jpg
type of school high school
School number 50793
founding 1880: Royal College
Precursors 2 (1827): Latin Schools
Precursors 1 (1578): Pedagogy
address

Landwehrstrasse 22
67433 Neustadt an der Weinstrasse

place Neustadt an der Weinstrasse
country Rhineland-Palatinate
Country Germany
Coordinates 49 ° 21 '22 "  N , 8 ° 9' 27"  E Coordinates: 49 ° 21 '22 "  N , 8 ° 9' 27"  E
carrier City of Neustadt an der Weinstrasse
student 994 (as of December 31, 2014)
Teachers 73 plus 6 trainee lawyers (as of December 31, 2014)
management Lenelotte Möller
Website www.krg-nw.de

The Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium , abbreviated to KRG , is a regular school in the Palatinate city ​​of Neustadt an der Weinstrasse , which acts as a school authority .

As a high school in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate it results in nine years (grades 5 to 13) for high school or in six (5 to 10) for GCSEs . The KRG is an old-language grammar school, which is why three foreign languages ​​are compulsory up to the end of secondary level I (10th grade) .

The changes over the course of the history of the KRG (see section History ) are also reflected in the number of pupils: While 180 pupils were the upper limit in the former Latin school, it was a maximum of 300 in the old-language grammar school. This increased in the late 1970s and early 1980s the number then goes up to 1400 to level off at around 1000 today.

geography

location

83 years after the construction of the school building in the inner-city Hindenburgstrasse 14 , the new KRG building at Landwehrstrasse 22 was opened on June 3, 1969 in the Böbig school center, which was then newly built on the northeast edge of the Winzingen district . The main building stands at 131  m above sea level. NHN and thus at one of the lowest points in today's Neustadt core city. A general education school , the Realschule plus im Böbig and the Neustadt vocational school are located near the KRG .

Transport links

The German railway operates its own when school center Böbig breakpoint same name, from Neustadt Hauptbahnhof is made just before the point where the east of the city, the railway lines towards Mannheim (right) and Bad Durkheim / Monsheim separate (left). More than 1000 pupils reach the school center every day via the stop, which is 150 m away from the KRG, while the rest of the pupil traffic is handled by buses and private vehicles.

investment

main building

Winzinger Wassergescheid: The teaching buildings are located behind the trees on the "island" between Rehbach (left) and Speyerbach (right).

The complex consists of a three-storey square main building with a side length of about 65 m, which includes an atrium of 40 by 40 m. A fire on the flat roof on February 7, 1968, which was triggered during paving work towards the end of the construction phase, had caused considerable damage and delayed the inauguration of the new building by over a year.

Auxiliary systems

The KRG has a 45 by 40 m sports hall and a sports field . The auditorium drawn in the original building plan and promised "soon" by the Rhineland-Palatinate state politicians at the inauguration has been a long time coming. Therefore, cultural performances (e.g. the well-known big band of the KRG, the orchestra , the school choir or the theater AGs) and all other school events (open day, Sextaner festival, student assemblies, etc.) must continue to take place in the sports hall. which naturally does not have adequate acoustics . In addition, the stage has to be set up for each event and the hall has to be seated hundreds of times by the actors. Afterwards - often late at night and in festive clothing - the hall has to be completely cleared again so that it is free for physical education on the following days.

Connecting routes

The classroom and the playground are between Speyerbach and Rehbach , which are 200 m west of the Winzinger Wassergescheid . Two small bridges lead to the sports facilities north of the Rehbach; the east is covered and provides a direct connection from the main building to the sports hall.

history

The KRG has the longest tradition of all Neustadt high schools . Source for this section was 2004 u. a. also the website of the KRG. In the meantime, wording from the Wikipedia article has also been adopted on the KRG website.

Surname

Elector Ruprecht
Elector Ruprecht and the two women he was married to one after the other: Elisabeth von Namur (1330–1382) and Beatrix von Berg (1360–1395; right)

When the ninth class was introduced at the school in 1880, the Palatinate belonged to the Kingdom of Bavaria . That is why the school has been called the Royal College since then . In 1891 it was renamed the Humanistic Gymnasium ; She kept this name until after the end of the Second World War . Until 1964 it then operated as the Altsprachliches Gymnasium , for which students had to pay school fees to the city of Neustadt until 1960 .

On May 8, 1964, the Palatine Elector Ruprecht I (1309-1390), who came from a Bavarian line of the House of Wittelsbach , served as the new namesake . The choice of name fell on him because he did a lot for education in his residence town of Neustadt: after building the Neustadt collegiate church around 1360 (which has been a simultaneous church since 1705 with a partition wall drawn in in 1707/08), he attached a collegiate school to it.

Ruprecht is buried in the burial place of the collegiate church, as is his second wife Beatrix von Berg , who only survived him by five years. Both graves and epitaphs have been preserved. The graves are located in the center aisle of what is now the Catholic choir of the collegiate church and are marked with modern bronze inscriptions. The historical cover plates were removed from the floor to protect them and placed upright on the back wall of the Catholic part of the church, which is also the partition wall to the Protestant area. At the side of Ruprecht and Beatrix, three other family members found their final resting place: Count Palatine Rudolf II (1306–1353), his wife Margarete of Sicily-Aragon (1331–1377) and Blanca of England (1392–1409), who died early Wife of the future Elector Ludwig III.

precursor

Count Palatine Johann Casimir

In 1578, Count Palatine Johann Casimir founded the Casimirianum named after him at his administrative seat in what was then Neustadt an der Haardt . This was a Calvinist university , which was preceded by a particular school and a pedagogy (also called grammar school illustrious and comparable to today's grammar school) to prepare for the course . The university stayed in Neustadt for only six years; After Johann Casimir, supporter of the Calvinist direction of the Reformation , had become administrator of the Electoral Palatinate in 1583 , teaching was relocated to Heidelberg and integrated into the university there .

The pedagogy, on the other hand, could last more than 200 years. It went under in 1797, when the areas of the Electoral Palatinate on the left bank of the Rhine were conquered by French troops and later largely added to the Donnersberg department . At the same time also disappeared once by Jesuits founded Latin school in order until 1808 as École Secondaire again first go.

With the end of the French occupation after Napoleon's defeat in the Battle of Waterloo (1815), the Kingdom of Bavaria became responsible for the Rhine district in 1816 ; This is how the part of the former Electoral Palatinate on the left bank of the Rhine was called before it was absorbed into the Bavarian Palatinate in 1835, which is largely identical to today's Palatinate .

As early as 1817, the Bavarian administration dissolved the École Secondaire. A new private Latin school began teaching, which was recognized by the state after ten years. The expansion into a four-class, then five-class Latin school followed in slow steps, to which a kind of commercial class was attached as a real branch.

Promotion to high school

The new building from 1886 in the city center
principal from to
Lenelotte Möller 2016
Hartmut Loos 2007 2016
Ursula Anker 1996 2007
Günter Weingarth † 1978 1996
Berthold Emrich † 1970 1977
Karl Zeitlinger † 1963 1970
Herbert Silbernagel † 1953 1963
Hans Otto Kompter † 1945 1953
Friedolin Uhl † 1939 1945
Otto Müller † 1937 1939
Fritz Unkelbach † 1935 1937
Karl Mederle † 1929 1935
Heinrich Lieberich † 1919 1929
Karl Hammerschmidt 1913 1919
Anton Weninger † 1909 1913
Jakob Müller † 1880 1909

It was not until 1880 that the school became a full institution, a humanistic grammar school with the Bavarian title of Royal College . Latin and Greek were still in the foreground, but in addition to the mother tongue , the newer foreign languages ​​were also taken into account, as well as history , geography , but also natural history and mathematics . It was only hesitant to warm up for physical exercise ; singing was offered instead of instrumental music. In 1886, after two years of construction, they moved into the then new school building in what is now Hindenburgstrasse, which, including the building site, had cost 265,793.16 marks.

After 1880, the old-language grammar school of Bavarian provenance retained its influence from the old languages ​​until long after the Second World War . The subject German was upgraded, modern foreign languages ​​found their place, even Italian was offered. Mathematics began to be emphasized more than before, and the natural sciences also gained some importance.

World wars and the Nazi era

Teaching staff 1930 with later Holocaust victim Karl Strauss in the back right

The First World War did not bring about any changes in the school, but it did lead to significant personnel cuts: a teacher and 18 high school students died as soldiers, plus at least 120 former students. In the time of National Socialism , sport was promoted more strongly, but the ideology of the rulers left no particular mark on the subjects taught in the old-language grammar school. However, the personal effects were serious: far more teachers and students lost their lives in the Second World War than in the First.

The only Jewish teacher at the school, professor Karl Strauss (1883–1942), who had been teaching mathematics and physics since 1922, was removed from service by the Nazi rulers in 1935. In 1940 he and his family were initially deported to the Gurs internment camp in the south of France ; In 1942 he was brought to Poland and gassed there in Auschwitz-Birkenau . Only her daughter Margarete, later Margaret Strauss Berman, who was excluded in 1937 as a 15-year-old high school student and who emigrated to relatives in the USA in 1938 , survived. In 1998 she visited her hometown. In memory of her father, the first Neustadt stumbling block by Cologne artist Gunter Demnig was laid in front of the KRG on December 16, 2002 .

Post-war era

Even before the last major reform of the subjects in 1964, three foreign languages ​​were required, while English only played a minor role as an additional elective subject. Latin was taught from grades 5 to 13, French from 7 to 11, and ancient Greek from 8 to 13. Both ancient languages ​​- along with German and mathematics - were therefore part of the written Abitur examination .

In 1975 the Mainz study level (MSS) was introduced at the KRG as a reformed upper level , which still exists today in a modified form. The MSS course system also extended classes to the afternoons; Saturday was no longer a class day from the 1994/95 school year. In the MSS, students can determine their subjects in a wide range of advanced and basic courses .

Within eight years the KRG was able to celebrate three anniversaries: 1978 the founding of the pedagogy by Johann Casimir 400 years ago, 1980 the hundredth anniversary of the grammar school and 1986 one hundred years since the construction of the new grammar school building in the current Hindenburgstrasse, where the adult education center moved in 1969 and today mainly offices of the city administration are housed.

On November 28, 2019 in the Casimirianum, the student cooperative organized a celebration for the KRG on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the inauguration of the new building.

Focus

foreign languages

All students learn Latin from the fifth grade , English from the sixth grade and a third compulsory foreign language from the eighth grade, either ancient Greek or French .

Other languages ​​are offered according to interest and teacher availability, sometimes in cooperation with the other Neustadt high schools, for example Spanish , Italian or Russian . For pupils who choose ancient Greek as their third foreign language, French lessons are also regularly offered in the form of a voluntary work group.

The extensive foreign language activities of the KRG also include student exchange programs with partner schools in Alsace (France) , Hanover (New Hampshire, USA) and Sicily (Italy) .

music

The KRG Big Band is known nationwide for its performances and has produced a number of records and CDs since the mid-1980s and won many awards. I.a. she reached 3rd place behind two music high schools in the nationwide Skoda jazz competition . Their long-time band leader, the music teacher Werner Dech, who died in 2005 at the age of 55, had led the big band for 25 years. After it was temporarily led by Stefan Weis, a former student of the KRG, it was led from summer 2005 to summer 2009 by Zoltan Garami, a college friend of the deceased. The current band leader is the music teacher Carsten Wegner.

The orchestra and the school choir made awards and performances - u. a. in the Neustadter Saalbau and on the Neustadter Marktplatz - talk about yourself. Some of the performances were also released on CD.

Natural sciences, computer science

The third focus at the KRG is the natural sciences. In working groups from grade 6 onwards, the students have the opportunity to carry out their own experiments. In the MSS, advanced courses in biology, chemistry and physics complete the offer. PCs with free network access are available in the computer rooms and in the library.

Study cooperative

The study cooperative of the humanistic Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium e. V. was founded in 1926 as an association for former students. Today it also counts teachers, parents and friends of the grammar school among its members. The number of these in 2007 exceeded the size of the current student body by around 50% at 1471. The study association has set itself the goal of taking on tasks that the school authority cannot financially manage. Through her membership fees and donations she helps with the acquisition of teaching materials, such as B. PCs, microscopes , beamers or projectors , and grants aid for school trips and other school events. In addition, she manages several foundations , from whose income particularly talented pupils or students are promoted. In 2006, for example, a total of almost € 25,000 in aid was made available, of which almost 15,000 came directly from the student cooperative and 10,000 from custody funds of the foundations.

In 2001 the student cooperative celebrated its 75th anniversary. At the anniversary celebration on September 15, Bernhard Argus, born on April 7, 1906 and graduating from high school in 1925, was honored as the last living founding member. In 2006 the grammar school and student cooperative organized a ceremony for his 100th birthday, and he died on July 28, 2008 at the age of 102.

At the 75th anniversary celebration, the student cooperative also remembered its member Christian Adams. This graduate year 1983 was four days before the anniversary as a functionary of the German Wine Institute in the USA, when he became one of the eleven German victims of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001; he died at the age of 37 in the crash of flight UA93 near Shanksville , Pennsylvania.

Personalities

Surname Life dates Relationship with the KRG job
Johann Philipp Pareus 1576-1648 1610–1622 rector at the forerunner pedagogy Latinist, son of Reformed theology professor David Pareus
Balthasar Venator
(born as Balthasar Jäger)
1594-1664 Student at the forerunner of pedagogy, best graduate of the final year 1613 Humanist, poet, satirist
Johannes von Geissel 1796-1864 several years of attending the forerunner Latin school Bishop of Speyer, Archbishop of Cologne, Cardinal
Jakob Anton Leyser 1830-1897 several years of teaching at the grammar school Protestant theologian , religion teacher and historian , said in his hometown Zweibruecken the Jakob-Leyser-road dedicated
Christian Mehlis 1850-1933 several years of teaching at the grammar school Historians especially of the history of the Palatinate (private library with around 3000 volumes in the holdings of the Palatinate State Library in Speyer)
Johann Martin Jäger alias Fritz Claus 1853-1923 several years of attending the forerunner Latin school Catholic pastor, local writer
Lukas Grünenwald 1858-1937 Several years of teaching and teaching at the grammar school Teacher and homeland researcher
Jakob Friedrich Bussereau 1863-1919 several years of attending the forerunner Latin school Catholic theologian, prelate and founder of an order
Joseph Maria Benedikt Clauss 1868-1949 one-year visit to the forerunner Latin school Catholic theologian and archivist
Adolf Boyé 1869-1934 High school student and high school graduate Diplomat, State Secretary in the Foreign Office, German envoy in Beijing
Karl Theodor Helfferich 1872-1924 High school student and high school graduate Vice Chancellor of the German Empire and Chairman of the German National Party
Ludwig Sinsheimer 1873-1942 High school student and high school graduate Lawyer, author in the field of wine law, victim of the Holocaust
Max Hartmann 1876-1962 High school student and high school graduate Zoologist, author of many standard biological works
Alban Haas 1877-1968 several years of teaching at the grammar school Catholic theologian, papal house prelate, historian especially of Neustadt history, honorary citizen of Neustadt
Edgar Dacqué 1878-1945 High school students Natural scientist and theosophist
Robert Helm 1879-1955 High school student and high school graduate Industrialist and local politician
Hans Geiger 1882-1945 High school student and high school graduate Physicist and mathematician, inventor of the Geiger counter
Hermann Sinsheimer 1883-1950 High school student and high school graduate Journalist, theater critic and writer ( Hermann Sinsheimer Prize )
Karl Strauss 1883-1942 several years of teaching at the grammar school Teacher for mathematics and physics, member of the Neustadt city council, victim of the Holocaust, 1st  stumbling block in Neustadt (2002)
Konrad Linder 1884-1963 High school student and high school graduate Classical philologist and pedagogue
Friedrich Sprater 1884-1952 High school student and high school graduate Prehistoric, director of the Palatinate History Museum
Johannes Pfeiffer 1886-1965 High school student and high school graduate Catholic theologian, church historian, professor of theology at the University of Santiago de Chile
Ludwig Stamer 1892-1977 several years of teaching at the grammar school Catholic theologian, historian above all of the Palatinate church history, papal house prelate
Carl August Lieberich 1893-1970 High school student and high school graduate Economist, officer and association official
Albert Finck 1895-1956 several years of teaching at the grammar school Rhineland-Palatinate Minister for Education and Culture
Franz Pfeiffer 1900-1979 High school student and high school graduate Lawyer, District President of the Palatinate
Karl Lothar Wolf 1901-1969 High school student and high school graduate Chemist and head of several scientific institutes
Eduard Orth 1902-1968 High school student and high school graduate Rhineland-Palatinate Minister for Education and Culture
Bernhard Argus 1906-2008 High school student and high school graduate Founding member (1926) of the student cooperative and in 2001 as the last contemporary witness, participant in the 75th anniversary celebration
Erich Stolleis 1906-1986 High school student and high school graduate Lawyer, Lord Mayor of Ludwigshafen am Rhein from 1937 to 1941
Oskar Stübinger 1910-1988 High school student and high school graduate Farmer, politician (CDU) and Minister of State for Rhineland-Palatinate
Margaret Strauss ( English spelling) Berman
(born as Margarete Strauss)
* 1922 High school student (exiled as a Jew in 1937) Microbiologist, as the daughter of Karl Strauss ( see above ), eyewitness to the persecution of Jews during the National Socialist era
Berthold Emrich 1923-2016 Pupils, high school graduates and headmasters at high school Ministerial Director i. R.
Luise Hackelsberger * 1924 several years of teaching at the grammar school Daughter and estate administrator of the writer Werner Bergengruen , author and publisher
Arnold Bittlinger * 1928 High school students German-Swiss Protestant theologian, psychologist, psychotherapist, author and speaker
Benno Zech * 1928 High school student and high school graduate Teachers and politicians (CDU)
Ingo Wenz 1934-2016 High school student and high school graduate Lawyer, from 1985 to 1999 director of the Neustadt District Court
Gustav-Adolf Bähr 1938-2020 High school student and high school graduate Formerly head of department at Südwestfunk, initiator of the Herrenhof cultural center, recipient of the Federal Cross of Merit (1992) and other high-profile awards
Norbert Platz * 1939 High school student and high school graduate Anglist , professor emeritus at the University of Trier
Hans Mercker * 1940 High school student and high school graduate Religious scholar , professor emeritus at the University of Koblenz-Landau
Pirmin Spit * 1940 High school student and high school graduate Historian , professor emeritus at the University of Mannheim
Gerhard Postel 1941-2012 High school student and high school graduate Protestant theologian and pastor, nature conservationist, founding member of the PfalzStorch campaign
Gernot hull * 1941 High school student and high school graduate Sculptor and lecturer, professor emeritus at the University of Kaiserslautern
Michael Stolleis * 1941 High school student and high school graduate Lawyer and legal historian, professor emeritus at the University of Frankfurt
Karl-Jörg Walter 1941-2006 High school student and high school graduate Palatinate dialect poet , multiple prize winner and longtime juror of dialect competitions
Norbert Wokart * 1941 High school student and high school graduate Philosopher and author
Ulf Hoelscher * 1942 High school students Violinist, soloist and chamber musician, professor emeritus for violin at the Staatliche Musikhochschule Karlsruhe
Bernd Lütz-Binder * 1942 High school student and high school graduate Lawyer and Defense Attorney
Hans Christof Müller-Busch * 1943 High school student and high school graduate Doctor, pain researcher, professor emeritus at Dresden International University, recipient of the Federal Cross of Merit (2012)
Lutz Frisch * 1944 High school student and high school graduate High school teacher and headmaster, politician (CDU, formerly MdL)
Uwe-Martin Haiberg
(own Uwe Hoelscher)
* 1944 High school student and high school graduate Violinist , soloist and chamber musician , professor emeritus for violin at the Berlin University of the Arts
Benedikt Koehlen * 1944 High school student and high school graduate Pianist and lecturer at the Richard Strauss Conservatory in Munich
Gerd Weiland * 1945 High school students Painter and sculptor
Albert H. Keil * 1947 High school student and high school graduate Palatinate dialect poet , multiple literary prize winner and winner of dialect competitions
Helmut Bernhard * 1948 High school students Honorary professor, archaeologist and conservationist
Mario Scheuermann 1948-2015 High school students Journalist and wine author
Judith Kauffmann * 1949 High school student Journalist and television presenter
Franz-Georg Rössler 1949-2017 High school student and high school graduate High school teacher for music and geography
Wolfgang Schlick * 1949 High school student and high school graduate former Vice President of the Federal Court of Justice
Udo Röbel * 1950 High school students Journalist ( Kießling affair , Gladbeck hostage drama )
Alexander Roessler * 1951 High school student and high school graduate Pianist , professor at the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna , grandson of the German-Baltic pianist and composer Richard Rössler
Gunhild Hoelscher * 1953 Schoolgirl and high school graduate Violinist , soloist and chamber musician
Ruth Ratter * 1955 High school student and teacher High school teacher, politician in Rhineland-Palatinate (Bündnis 90 / Die Grünen, formerly MdL)
Rolf Schlicher * 1955 High school student and high school graduate Editor of the daily newspaper Die Rheinpfalz , awarded the Palatinate Prize in 2015 - Media Prize - of the Palatinate District Association
Martina Hardt-Holler * 1957 Schoolgirl and high school graduate High school teacher, politician in Hesse (SPD, formerly MdL)
Matthias Zech * 1957 High school student and high school graduate Pastoral advisor, Palatinate dialect poet , 2015 winner of the Palatinate dialect poet contest in Bockenheim
Bertram Brossardt * 1960 High school student and high school graduate Economic functionary
Thomas Kiefer * 1962 High school student and high school graduate Catholic theologian and author
Hans-Ulrich Ihlenfeld * 1963 High school student and high school graduate Politician in Rhineland-Palatinate (CDU), District Administrator of the Bad Dürkheim district
Christian Adams 1964-2001 High school student and high school graduate Oenologist and Marketing Director, victim of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack ( UA93 flight crash in Pennsylvania)
Thorsten Bach * 1965 High school student and high school graduate Chemist, Professor of Organic Chemistry
Steffen Christmann * 1965 High school student and high school graduate President of the Association of German Prädikatsweingüter (VDP)
Christian Torkewitz * 1975 High school student and high school graduate Jazz saxophonist, clarinetist, flutist and pianist
Hannes Pohlit * 1976 High school student and high school graduate Composer, pianist and conductor
Dirk Herber * 1979 High school student and high school graduate Police officer, politician in Rhineland-Palatinate (CDU, 2016 MdL)
Isabel Mackensen * 1986 Schoolgirl and high school graduate SPD politician and member of the Bundestag
Misbah Khan * 1989 Schoolgirl and high school graduate GREEN politician
Simon Werdelis * 1990 High school student and high school graduate Theater and film actor

Sources and literature

  • Königliche Studienanstalt Neustadt an der Haardt (Ed.): Program of the Königl. University of Applied Sciences in Neustadt ad Haardt . Kranzbühler, Neustadt ad H. 1881–1893 ( digitized version 1881–1886; 1889; 1893).
  • Humanistic Gymnasium Neustadt an der Haardt (Hrsg.): Annual reports of the Kgl. Humanistic Gymnasium Neustadt ad H. Neustadt 1894–1895; 1897 ( digitized from 1894; 1897).
  • Humanistic Gymnasium Neustadt an der Haardt (Hrsg.): Program of the Kgl. Humanistic Gymnasium Neustadt ad Hdt. Neustadt ad Hdt. 1896; 1898–1916 ( digitized version 1896; 1899–1902; 1905–1912).
  • Karl Tavernier: History of the high school in Neustadt a. d. Haardt 1880-1930 . In: Festschrift to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the institution . Neustadt an der Haardt 1930.
  • Otto Müller: History of the humanistic grammar school Neustadt a. d. Weinstrasse from September 1, 1930 to February 29, 1952 . Neustadt an der Weinstrasse 1952.
  • Staatliches Altsprachliches Gymnasium and Studiengenossenschaft (Ed.): Deo et musis sacrum. Humanistic Gymnasium Neustadt Weinstrasse 1880–1955 . Festschrift. Neustadt an der Weinstrasse 1955.
  • Karl Zeitlinger: Overview of the history of the school . In: Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium . Festschrift for the inauguration of the new building, June 3, 1969. Neustadt an der Weinstrasse 1969.
  • Friedrich Burkhardt: Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium Neustadt an der Weinstrasse . Development of a school 1578–1978. Ed .: State Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium. Neustadt an der Weinstrasse 1978 ( table of contents at DNB ).
  • Hilde Schmidt-Häbel: The family of Dr. Karl Strauss - Fate of Teachers in the Third Reich . In: Over - It's never over . Contributions to the history of the Jews in Neustadt an der Weinstrasse. Series of publications of the Neustadt district group in the Historical Association of the Palatinate, Neustadt an der Weinstrasse 2005, p. 197 f .
  • Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium / Studiengenossenschaft (Ed.): Ruprechtiana . Chronicle of the Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium and annual report of the student cooperative. Neustadt an der Weinstrasse (annually since 2007/08).

Web links

References and comments

  1. Map service of the landscape information system of the Rhineland-Palatinate nature conservation administration (LANIS map) ( notes )
  2. ^ Albert H. Keil: Attention - School is on fire! February 8, 1968. Retrieved December 7, 2019 .
  3. Gerd N. Meyer: History of the school. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on October 13, 2007 ; Retrieved January 21, 2010 .
  4. State high school and student cooperative (ed.): Deo et musis sacrum . Festschrift. Neustadt 1955, p. 14 (first names only abbreviated).
  5. Note: The school management was the responsibility of men for 116 years, from 1880 to 1996, and was then transferred to a woman for the first time.
  6. ^ Annual directory of the papers published at the German school institutions. archive.org, accessed November 29, 2014 .
  7. German Literature Lexicon. The 20th century. Konrad Feilchenfeldt, p. 48 , accessed on November 29, 2014 .
  8. Personnel status of grammar schools, Progymnasien and Latin schools in the Kingdom of Bavaria. archive.org, accessed November 29, 2014 .
  9. ^ A b c Karl Tavernier: History of the grammar school in Neustadt a. d. Haardt 1880-1930 . Neustadt 1930.
  10. ^ Otto Müller: History of the Humanist High School Neustadt a. d. Weinstrasse from September 1, 1930 to February 29, 1952 . Neustadt 1952.
  11. ^ A b Karl Zeitlinger: Overview of the history of the school . Neustadt 1969.
  12. Hilde Schmidt-Häbel: The family of Dr. Karl Strauss - Fate of Teachers in the Third Reich . Neustadt 2005.
  13. ^ A b Study cooperative of the humanistic Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium (ed.): Annual report 2006 . Neustadt an der Weinstrasse March 16, 2007.
  14. ^ A b Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium / Studiengenossenschaft (ed.): Ruprechtiana . Chronicle of the Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium and annual report of the student cooperative 2007/08. S. 147 .
  15. a b Thilo Mischke: Eleven dreams that murdered the terrorists. In: bild.de. September 11, 2011, accessed June 20, 2014 .
  16. a b United Hero: Christian Adams. unitedheroes.com, accessed on 23 February 2015 (with CV; English ).
  17. Leyser, Jakob Anton. German biography, accessed February 15, 2016 .
  18. Thomas Behnke: Between all stools in search of meaning . In: The Rhine Palatinate . Ludwigshafen August 18, 2012.
  19. Steffen Gall (ffg): Berthold Emrich died at the age of 93 . In: The Rheinpfalz , Mittelhaardter Rundschau . Ludwigshafen September 20, 2016 (obituary).
  20. Wolfgang Kreilinger (wkr): Committed to the next generation . In: The Rheinpfalz , Mittelhaardter Rundschau . No. 80 . Ludwigshafen April 6, 2016, p. 16 (obituary).
  21. a b c d e f g h i j k l m study cooperative of the humanistic Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium (ed.): Directory of members . Neustadt an der Weinstrasse, annually.
  22. ^ Cross of Merit for Gustav-Adolf Bähr . In: The Rheinpfalz , Mittelhaardter Rundschau . Ludwigshafen July 9, 1992.
  23. ^ Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium / Studiengenossenschaft (ed.): Ruprechtiana . Chronicle of the Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium and annual report of the student cooperative 2014/15. S. 185 .
  24. ^ VIAF: Virtual International Authority File. Retrieved March 7, 2013 .
  25. Literary Awards by Albert H. Keil. Verlag PfalzMundArt, accessed on October 19, 2015 (prices no. 15, Mannheim , and 47, district of Südwestpfalz ).
  26. Literary Awards by Albert H. Keil. Verlag PfalzMundArt, accessed on October 19, 2015 (prices no. 5, 11, 28 and 44).
  27. Alexander Rößler: Email to school friend Albert H. Keil . Vienna October 24, 2015 (forwarded to chronicler 47 ).
  28. ^ Andreas Ganter (gana): Pfalzpreis: Award for Rolf Schlicher . In: Die Rheinpfalz , complete edition . Ludwigshafen November 23, 2015, p. 1 .
  29. CV. dirk-herber.de, accessed on April 11, 2016 .
  30. Dirk Herber elected to the state parliament! (No longer available online.) CDU Neustadt / Weinstrasse, March 16, 2016, archived from the original on April 23, 2016 ; Retrieved April 11, 2016 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.cdu-nw.de
  31. Anke Herbert (ahb): About the person: Simon Werdelis . In: Die Rheinpfalz , local edition Mittelhaardter Rundschau . Ludwigshafen January 17, 2017 ( online [accessed March 1, 2017]).
  32. ^ Karl Tavernier (1866–1931) was a high school professor and historian, especially of Neustadt history.
  33. Otto Müller was head of the grammar school from 1937 to 1939.
  34. Karl Zeitlinger was head of the grammar school from 1963 to 1970.