Lore Sporhan clutter

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Lore Sporhan-Krempel (born April 19, 1908 in Stuttgart ; † March 9, 1994 ) was a German writer and paper historian.

Life

The parents were the paper and cardboard wholesaler Karl August Krempel and his wife Elise nee Mayer. In 1911, the father bought the property of the Chr. Weiß & Cie. Paper mill. in Enzweihingen , which emerged from a paper mill founded in 1792 . She attended the Königin-Charlotte-Realschule in Stuttgart, completed an education in housekeeping, entered the Königin-Katharina-Stift ( upper secondary school ) in 1927 and passed her school leaving examination at Easter 1929. She studied in Tübingen , Munich , Leipzig and Vienna and attended lectures in history, literary studies, geography and newspaper studies. Her doctoral thesis on the history of German fashion magazines was supervised by the journalism professor Karl d'Ester at the Institute for Scientific Newspaper Studies in Munich. An anti-Semitic publication in Ludendorff's publishing house in 1940 represented the low point of her literary activity. During the war, the veterinarian Wilhelm Sporhan, whom she married in 1934 and with whom she had lived in Schwenningen , died.

During the years of their marriage she worked as a freelancer for various newspapers and magazines. She had been interested in literary material since a study trip to Nördlingen in 1930 . It was there that she discovered the fate of Maria Holl , who had been accused of witchcraft and subjected to 60 tortures. While her husband was doing military service, she conducted archival research in Nördlingen and published a serial novel in the Stuttgarter Neue Tagblatt . In 1949 the text was also published in book form and premiered as a play in Nördlingen on the Alte Bastei open-air stage in 1954 .

After the Second World War she came into close contact with Gerhard Piccard , who through her got to know old hand-made papers and their watermarks . Decades of joint research and publication resulted. Both were also in close contact with the technical and economic historian Wolfgang Stromer von Reichenbach .

In 1959 she was one of the founders of the International Working Group of Paper Historians (IPH) .

estate

Fonts (selection)

  • Ochsenkopf and double tower. The history of papermaking in Ravensburg. Stuttgart 1952.
  • The paper mill in the imperial city of Ulm. In: Ulm and Oberschwaben , year 33, 1953, pp. 108–118.
  • Paper from the Filstal. Then and now. Stuttgart 1955
  • From the art of papermaking at the origin of the stove. Dedicated to the friends of our house. Edited by the Unterkochen paper factory. Aalen 1955.
  • A brief history of papermaking in southwest Germany. In: The world lives with the book. From the history of printing and paper production in Swabia. By Franz Hammer and Lore Sporhan-Krempel. Preface by Gustav Barthel . Ceremony for the 75th anniversary of the Graphic Club Stuttgart. Stuttgart o. J. (1956), pp. 49-98.
  • Paper mills and papermakers in Lindau and Upper Swabia. Lindau; Konstanz 1957 (New Year's sheet of the Lindau Museum Association 14).
  • Chronicle of papermaking in the Osnabrück area. History of the paper factory GmbH vorm. Brothers Chamberlain. Osnabrück 1958.
  • About paper and its processing in old and new times. Edited on the occasion of the 10th anniversary of the paper technology department at the Oskar von Miller Polytechnic Munich. Munich 1959.
  • The Blaubeuren paper mill. In: Zeitschrift für Württembergische Landesgeschichte , year 18, 1959, 1st issue, pp. 163–169.
  • The paper mill to run on the Eyach. In: Zeitschrift für Württembergische Landesgeschichte , year 18, 1959, 2nd issue, pp. 361–363.
  • Early use of "commercial" paper. In: Papiergeschichte , Volume 9, 1959, pp. 74–76.
  • with Wolfgang von Stromer : The trading house of the Stromer von Nürnberg and the history of the first German paper mill. According to new sources. In: Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte , Volume 47, 1960, pp. 81-104.
  • Reports on “paper trips” between 1817 and 1819. In: Wochenblatt für Papierfabrikation , Volume 90, 1962, pp. 1279–1282; Volume 91, 1963, pp. 19-22.
  • Johann Friedrich Cotta's paper bills. 1788-1806. With a comment. In: Archive for the history of the book , Volume 5, 1964, Sp. 1369–1472.
  • The paper mill to undercook. In: Archive for the history of the book industry , Volume 4, 1965, Sp. 547-591.
  • Trade and dealers in Ravensburger paper. In: Papiergeschichte , Volume 22, 1972, pp. 29–40.
  • Paper production and paper trade in the imperial city of Nuremberg and its territory. In: Contributions to the economic history of Nuremberg. Volume 2. Nuremberg 1967, pp. 726-750.
  • The paper mills in Esslingen am Neckar. In: Archive for the history of books , Volume 14, 1974, Col. 221-256.
  • The Papierer Braun in Reutlingen. Elwert, Marburg 1975.
  • Susanna Maria Sandrart and her family. A Nuremberg engraver and draftsman in the Baroque era: In: Archive for the history of books , Volume 21, 1980, Sp. 965–1004.
  • Paper as a commodity - shown using the example of the imperial city of Ravensburg between 1400 and 1730. In: Export trade and foreign trade before the industrial revolution. Edited by Franz Mathias and Josef Ried. Innsbruck 1984, pp. 31-45.
  • The sculptor Landolin Swoon from Dunningen . In: Schwäbische Heimat , Volume 37, 1986, pp. 217-224.
  • Ulman Stromer's Gleißmühle in Nuremberg. 600 years of papermaking in Germany. In: Ulman Stromer: Püchel by mein geslecht and by abentewr. For the 600th anniversary of the founding of Germany's first paper mill. Edited by the Association of German Paper Mills. Commentary tape. Modifications made by Lotte Kurras. Bonn 1990, pp. 171-195.

literature

  • Bibliography. Lore Sporhan-Krempel on his 70th birthday on April 19, 1978. With a foreword by Wolfgang von Stromer. OO 1978.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. See Lore Sporhan-Krempel: Chronicle of the August Krempel Soehne company (1871–1971). Enzweihingen plant. Stuttgart 1971.
  2. See Lore Krempel: curriculum vitae. In: dies .: The German fashion magazine. Their history and development together with a bibliography of German, English and French fashion magazines. (Newspaper and Life 14). Coburg 1935. Zugl. Munich, Phil. Fac., Diss. From 1933.
  3. See Lore Sporhan-Krempel: Revolt against Jews and rulers alien to the people. Factual report from the time before the great war 1618–1648. Ludendorffs Verlag, Munich 1940.
  4. See Lore Sporhan-Krempel: A life between old Scharteken. In memory of my 75th birthday party on April 23, 1983 in the Park-Hotel Stuttgart. Reproduced as Ms. [Stuttgart], [1983]. P. 4.
  5. See Lore Sporhan-Krempel: The witch of Nördlingen. The fate of Maria Holl. Novel . Kuhlmann, Stuttgart-Degerloch [1949]; (2nd edition) Steinmeier, Nördlingen [1979]
  6. ^ Cf. Gerhard Piccard and Lore Sporhan-Krempel: Contributions to the history of paper in Baden. Documented material about the construction costs of paper mills, paper production and paper wages in the 18th century in the Badische Stammlanden and front Austria. In: Wochenblatt für Papierfabrikation , Volume 78, 1950, pp. 357–360; Gerhard Piccard and Lore Sporhan-Krempel: The examination of the oldest surviving newspapers for their watermarks. A practical test of watermarking as a historical auxiliary science. In: Papiergeschichte , Volume 1, 1951, pp. 13–16; Lore Sporhan-Krempel and Gerhard Piccard: The paper mill at Niefern. In: Papiergeschichte , Volume 1, 1951, pp. 17–24; Lore Sporhan-Krempel and Gerhard Piccard: The attempt to achieve a domestic paper monopoly in the Duchy of Württemberg. Depicted according to archival material in the Ludwigsburg State Archives. In: Papiergeschichte , Volume 1, 1951, pp. 53–56; Gerhard Piccard and Lore Sporhan-Krempel: 440 years of papermaking in Freiburg. 100 years of the "New" Ferdinand Flinsch paper mill. Freiburg i. Br. 1952; Lore Sporhan-Krempel and Gerhard Piccard: The paper mill in Berg near Stuttgart. In: Papiergeschichte , Volume 2, 1952, pp. 26–28; Lore Sporhan-Krempel: The paper mills in Enzberg. With pauses in watermarks by Gerhard Piccard. In: Papiergeschichte , Volume 3, 1953, pp. 4–8.