Ludwig Gottlieb Crome

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ludwig Gottlieb Crome (born August 20, 1742 in Rehburg ; † June 5, 1794 in Lüneburg ) was a German teacher and taught as rector at schools in Hildesheim , Einbeck and Lüneburg.

Life

Andreanum high school in Hildesheim

Crome was the first son of Pastor Friedrich Andreas Crome . As early as his student days in Göttingen , he wrote poems that received positive attention (review by the orientalist Johann David Michaelis ). A poem about an adolescent girl who was in Göttingen with an artist group may have become one of the sources of inspiration for Goethe's Mignon .

Renaissance portal of the Ratsschule Einbeck

In 1768 he was rector at the Andreanum in Hildesheim, in 1771 at the Ratsschule in Einbeck, and in 1783 at the Johanneum in Lüneburg.

With the support of his brother-in-law, the Göttingen theology professor Christian Wilhelm Franz Walch , he translated and edited the five-volume work Ordres monastiques by Gabriele Musson from 1751 and published it in ten volumes as the pragmatic history of the most distinguished monastic orders . The indices created by him and intended for a final register volume, however, were not published by decision of the publisher.

Crome also devoted himself to the edition of a book found in the school files in Einbeck about events of the Reformation period in Einbeck by Georg Fathschild (* 1573), the rector of the Ratsschule in Einbeck until 1618. In 1785, Crome's origin and progression of the Reformation in Einbeck was printed by Friedrich Andreas Rosenbusch in Göttingen.

Furthermore, Crome wrote notes for some volumes of the Mosheim Church History edited by Johann Rudolph Schlegel ( Johann Lorenz von Mosheim : Church history of the New Testament ...).

The first of his sons was the theologian Friedrich Gottlieb Crome (1776–1850), the fourth the agricultural scientist Georg Ernst Wilhelm Crome (1781–1813), later son-in-law Albrecht Daniel Thaers . Friedrich Heinrich Phillipp Crome (1785–1841), his sixth son, was a police officer in Lübeck . His son, Friedrich Crome , worked at the Higher Appeal Court of the four Free Cities in Lübeck and, after its closure in 1879, moved to the Imperial Court in Leipzig , where he was later appointed Imperial Councilor of Justice .

From 1788 to 1791 Crome was the father of his nephew from Hildesheim , who later became the Africa explorer Friedrich Konrad Hornemann .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c Heinrich Wilhelm Rotermund: The learned Hanover . B. 1, 1823, p. 411 f .