Martin-Behaim-Gymnasium Nuremberg
Martin Behaim High School | |
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type of school | Scientific, technological and linguistic high school |
School number | 0236 |
founding | 1918 |
address |
Schultheißallee 1 |
place | Nuremberg |
country | Bavaria |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 49 ° 26 '22 " N , 11 ° 6' 14" E |
carrier | Free State of Bavaria |
student | 850 (as of: 2018/2019) |
Teachers | 71 (as of: 2018/2019) |
management | Gabriele Kuen |
Website | www.martin-behaim-gymnasium.de |
The Martin-Behaim-Gymnasium is a science, technology and language high school in Nuremberg .
history
Due to the steadily growing number of pupils at the existing district secondary schools, today's Dürer-Gymnasium , as well as today's Hans-Sachs-Gymnasium , the district administrator of the district of Middle Franconia decided in 1918 to set up a third four-class district secondary school . On September 1, 1919, it moved into the building of the former Lichtenhof district agricultural school at Katzwanger Strasse 11 in the shunting yard , before moving to the primary school building on Wölckernstrasse in the Galgenhof district on September 1, 1921 due to lack of space .
In 1924, following the state takeover of the now six-class school, it was renamed Realschule III , before it was expanded into an eight-class school with high school diploma in 1940 after it was renamed Oberschule on Wölckernstraße in 1940. The school building was completely destroyed in the air raids during the Second World War .
After the war, the school, now known as the Oberrealschule on Wölckernstrasse , resumed classes on January 8, 1946 in the Dürer Gymnasium building , before moving to the Melanchthon Gymnasium schoolhouse . On September 9, 1959, a new building in Wilhelm-Späth-Straße (today: Schultheissallee) was inaugurated, but it was not until 1969 that all students could move into it. In the meantime, the school buildings of the Willstätter-Gymnasium , the Johannes-Scharrer-Gymnasium and the school house at Königstor served as replacement rooms. As part of the nationwide standardization of the school system, the school was named after Martin Behaim from Nuremberg . In 1978, when girls were accepted for the first time, mixed-sex lessons took place at the grammar school and thus also at the last state school in the greater Nuremberg area.
In July 2017 it became known that the building from 1959 should give way to a new building due to its dilapidation and high renovation costs. The demolition and new construction will be realized in the early 2020s. During the transition period, the students are taught at the Bertolt Brecht School in Nuremberg .
Names
- District secondary school III (1919–1924)
- Realschule III (1924–1938)
- Secondary school on Wölckernstrasse (1938-?)
- Secondary school on Wölckernstrasse (? -1965)
- Martin-Behaim-Gymnasium (since 1965)
Known students
- Martin Heidingsfelder (* 1965), German American football player
- Martin Kastler (* 1974), German politician (CSU)
- Reinhard Kurth (1942–2014), German virologist and physician
- Markus Landerer (* 1976), Vienna Cathedral Kapellmeister
- Friedrich Lösel (* 1945), German psychologist and criminologist
- Horst P. Popp (* 1958), German banker
- Stefan Reuter (* 1966), German soccer player and manager
Known teachers
- Dieter Frey (* 1972), German soccer player
- Rüdiger Keuth (1945–2006), freelance artist
- Kurt Karl (* 1936 in Regensburg), music teacher and holder of the Federal Cross of Merit on ribbon
literature
- Friedrich Glauning: The development of the Nuremberg school system . In: The schools in Nuremberg with special consideration of the urban school system. Nuremberg, 1906, 90 pp.
- Otto Barthel: The schools in Nuremberg 1905–1960. With an introduction to the overall story. Nuremberg: City Archives, 1964, 680 p .; here: pp. 326–328
- Martin-Behaim-Gymnasium 1919–1994, commemorative publication for the 75th anniversary. In: Annual Report 1993/94
- Charlotte Bühl , Katrin Wacker: Martin-Behaim-Gymnasium . In: Michael Diefenbacher , Rudolf Endres (Hrsg.): Stadtlexikon Nürnberg . 2nd, improved edition. W. Tümmels Verlag, Nuremberg 2000, ISBN 3-921590-69-8 , p. 675 ( complete edition online ).
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c Martin-Behaim-Gymnasium Nürnberg on the pages of the Bavarian Ministry of Culture (km.bayern.de, accessed on July 29, 2019)
- ↑ a b c d e f g Charlotte Bühl , Katrin Wacker: Martin-Behaim-Gymnasium . In: Michael Diefenbacher , Rudolf Endres (Hrsg.): Stadtlexikon Nürnberg . 2nd, improved edition. W. Tümmels Verlag, Nuremberg 2000, ISBN 3-921590-69-8 , p. 675 ( complete edition online ).
- ^ Charlotte Bühl , Katrin Wacker: Martin-Behaim-Gymnasium . In: Michael Diefenbacher , Rudolf Endres (Hrsg.): Stadtlexikon Nürnberg . 2nd, improved edition. W. Tümmels Verlag, Nuremberg 2000, ISBN 3-921590-69-8 , p. 676 ( complete edition online ).
- ↑ More space: Nuremberg Behaim-Gymnasium will be demolished on nordbayern.de from July 26, 2017, accessed on December 2, 2017
- ^ Press report Nordbayern.de from March 19, 2019