Luitpold Haberl

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Luitpold Haberl (born June 22, 1898 in Dillingen an der Donau , † 1989 ) was a Germanist , Anglicist and founding director of the municipal language school (later the foreign language institute of the state capital of Munich ) and, together with the later Munich city school councilor Anton Fingerle, a member of the Bavarian freedom group .

Life

Luitpold Haberl was born in Dillingen an der Donau as the youngest child of the Kgl. High school teacher Johann Evangelist Haberl and his wife Maria. First Luitpold Haberl attended the Dillingen elementary school for boys; He then graduated from the Humanist High School in Dillingen in July 1917 . As a scholarship holder in the Maximilianeum, he studied German, history and English at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich .

After graduating, Haberl worked as a teacher at municipal schools in Munich until 1962. Most recently, Haberl held the position of senior studies director at the Municipal Luisengymnasium in Munich .

During the period of German National Socialism , Haberl worked as a trainer in a so-called interpreting company of the German Wehrmacht . After the end of the Second World War , Haberl was involved in the development of the language school set up by city school councilor Anton Fingerle on behalf of the American occupation forces. Haberl was founding director of the Foreign Language Institute of the City of Munich, in Munich-Neuhausen. Haberl understood the work of the interpreter as that of a language mediator. At the opening ceremony, Haberl formulated the spirit of the language school, which at that time had a very humanistic and professional ethical note: "The language school should help students to advance from natural national consciousness to a world community spirit." (Haberl, March 1, 1947). In 1949 Haberl left the language school at his own request.

Afterwards he was among other things the founder of the working group of the directorates of the Bavarian secondary schools for girls and from 1962 head of the department "Education and Research" in the Bavarian Philologist Association . He conducted extensive correspondence with the classical philologist Ludwig Englert , in which he objected to the changes to the admission to the grammar schools , according to which the entrance examination should be replaced by an opinion from the primary school teacher . In his opinion, the grammar school was "still a typical middle-class institution", making him one of the main participants in the resistance in the Bavarian Association of Philologists to the abandonment of the "elite school".

Honors

literature

  • Luitpold Haberl: How does the funding level support? From a study by the Frankfurt University. In: The higher school in Bavaria. Notification of the Bavarian Philologists Association. 4-5 / 1967, pp. 94-100.
  • Gabi Gasler: A journey through time through the history of FIM (picture on p. 6, bottom)
  • Ralf Empl: Luitpold Haberl (1898 - 1989), Munich 2019 (manuscript)

supporting documents

  1. a b City Archives Dillingen, 05 civil status
  2. ^ Institut Napoléon: Revue de l'Institut Napoléon, edition 184 . 2002, p. 189 .
  3. Gabi Galster: A journey through time through the history of the FIM . Ed .: Foreign Language Institute of the City of Munich. S. 6 .
  4. ^ Thies Marsen, Bayerischer Rundfunk (BR): Babylon in Schwabylon 70 years of foreign language institute in Munich. October 25, 2015, accessed July 22, 2019 .
  5. ^ Dillingen city archive, 06 schools
  6. ^ Maximilianeum Foundation: Maximilianeer by alphabet. Retrieved July 22, 2019 .
  7. Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich: the number of employees at LMU Munich. Winter half year 1918/19 .
  8. https://fim-blog.tumblr.com/ Retrieved July 22, 2019.
  9. The Federal Republic. Germany State Handbook: Part of the Free State of Bayer . Carl Heymanns, S. 47 .
  10. a b Gabi Galster: A journey through time through the history of the FUM . Ed .: Foreign Language Institute of the City of Munich. S. 7 .
  11. Gabi Galster: A journey through time through the history of the FIM . Ed .: Foreign Language Institute of the City of Munich. S. 8 .
  12. Entry DNB. In: DNB . Retrieved July 22, 2019 .
  13. Online view of the finding aid Nachl. Ludwig Englert. Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
  14. Birgit Brajdic: Only from the best parents: A cultural studies study on the competition for high school elite in Bavaria . Ed .: Herbert Utz Verlag. Carl Heymanns, ISBN 978-3-8316-4758-3 , pp. 89-91 .
  15. Entry DNB. In: DNB . Retrieved July 22, 2019 .