Maria Reinecke

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Maria Reinecke (also: Marie Reinecke ; * before 1884, † after 1906) was a German pianist , music teacher , music school founder and entrepreneur .

Life

Maria or Marie Reinecke was the sister of the Kapellmeister Karl Reinecke, who worked in Leipzig, and the daughter of the seminar music teacher, music teacher and music theorist Rudolf Reinecke (also: Rudolf Reincke) and one of his three wives. In 1884 she founded - unmarried called Fräulein - in Wolfenbüttel a music school and a seminar for unmarried music teachers with an attached piano and singing school.

At the beginning of the 1890s, Maria Reinecke set up a "Hochschule für Musik" in Hanover and lived in the premises of the seminar for music teachers in the house at Höltystraße 13 . During this time she also taught herself and was, among other things, the main musical teacher of the pianist Marta Milinowski .

Marie Herner-Henrici or the Hanover-based partner of the Hamburg-based company Henrici & Dunemann OHG Marie Henrici, née Herner, worked for a time at the Hochschule für Musik at Höltystraße 13 .

Fonts

  • Pedagogical guide through piano lessons with information on works that are suitable for use . Reinicke brothers, Hanover / Leipzig 1906

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Milinowski, Marta . In: John William Leonard (Editor-in-Chief): Woman's who's who of America. A biographical Dictionary of contemporary Women of the United States and Canada. 1914-1915 . The American Commonwealth Company, New York. ( Reprinted by Gale Research Company, Book Tower, Detroit 1976, ISBN 0-8103-4018-6 , p. 561) ( digitized in the English-language Wikisource) (English)
  2. Lina Morgenstern: Women's work in Germany: History of the German women's movement and statistics of women's work in all areas accessible to her , Volume 1, at the same time Berlin SW, Grossbeeren-Strasse 5. Verlag der Deutsche Hausfrauen-Zeitung. 1893; compare the information in the catalog of the German National Library ; P. 187; limited preview in Google Book search
  3. ^ A b c Christian Friedrich Kahnt (Red.): Personalnachrichten in ders .: New magazine for music . Organ of the Allgemeine Deutsche Musikverein and the Beethoven Foundation (NZfM), issue 36 of August 29, 1884, volume 51 (volume 80), CF Kahnt, Leipzig 1884, p. 386f .; here: p. 387; Digitized via archive.org
  4. ^ A b Oskar Fleischer , Alfred Valentin Heuss (Ed.): Journal of the International Music Society , Volume 8, Breitkopf & Härtel, Leipzig 1906, p. 149; limited preview in Google Book search
  5. Friedrich Jansa (ed.): Wagener, Else Gertrud Ilse Sophia , in ders .: German sound artists and musicians in word and image , 2nd edition, Leipzig: Verlag von Friedrich Jansa, 1911, p. 772; limited preview in Google Book search
  6. ^ A b The Musical Standard: A Newspaper for Musicians, Professional and Amateur , Reeves and Turner, 1884, p. 147; limited preview in Google Book search
  7. ^ Matthias Wiegandt:  Reinecke, Carl Heinrich Carsten. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 21, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-428-11202-4 , p. 347 f. ( Digitized version ).
  8. ^ Ernst Wilhelm Fritzsch (Ed.): Musical weekly paper. Organ for musicians and music lovers , year 22, EW Fritzsch, Leipzig 1891, p. 334; limited preview in Google Book search
  9. ^ Address book, city and business manual of the royal residence city of Hanover and the city of Linden 1899 , section I, part III: Alphabetical directory of residents and trading companies , p. 958; Digitized version of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Library - Lower Saxony State Library via the German Research Foundation
  10. ^ Richard Jakoby (Ed.): State University for Music and Theater Hanover. Structure, objectives, history of Hanover: Madsack, 1973, p. 41; limited preview in Google Book search
  11. ^ Official Gazette: Supplement to the Hamburg Law and Ordinance Gazette , Hamburg: Lütcke & Wulff, 1923, pp. 1093, 1117; limited preview in Google Book search