Maximilian Boehm

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Maximilian ("Max") Roland Boehm (born August 6, 1859 in Wenden ( Livonia ); † October 8, 1944 in Gotenhafen ) was a Baltic German educator.

Life

Born in Württemberg and employed as a district school inspector in Wenden, father Christian Boehm was married to Emilie Reimers, who came from Mitau . Maximilian Boehm attended the Hollandersche Gymnasium in Birkenruh near Wenden, studied philology in Dorpat from 1877 to 1883, graduating as a candidate and receiving the gold medal. After further studies in Leipzig and Strasbourg , from 1885 to 1892 he was a senior teacher at the state high school in Birkenruh , after which it was a teacher in Dorpat, where he worked as a librarian and secretary in the Estonian learned society, and later as a corresponding member. In 1902 he took on a position as senior teacher in Saarburg ( Lorraine ), from 1904 to 1914 in Gebweiler ( Alsace ) and from 1914 to 1919 in Strasbourg. From 1921 to 1923 he was employed in the Reich Ministry of the Interior , since 1924 retired. He then worked in various Baltic German organizations in Germany, from 1927 as chairman of the Baltic Trust Council. From 1943 he lived in Gotenhafen. His oldest son was Max Hildebert Boehm .

Fonts

  • Latvian taunts and related folk traditions. Translated and annotated from Latvian. Reval 1911. Reprint Hanover 1973.
  • The Latvians. Berlin 1917.
  • Latvian-Lithuanian folk tales. Jena 1924.

literature

  • Carola L. Gottzmann and Petra Hörner: Lexicon of the German-language literature of the Baltic States and St. Petersburg . 3 volumes; Verlag Walter de Gruyter, Berlin 2007. Vol. 1, pp. 259f. ISBN 978-3-11019338-1 .
  • Album of former teachers and students of the Livonian high school Emperor Alexander II in Birkenruh. St. Petersburg 1903, p. 13. ( digitized version ).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Max Boehm (Ed.): Christian Boehm: Life paths of a Swabian pedagogue. Diary sheets from the estate of weil. School inspector to Wenden (Livonia). Reval 1893.
  2. ^ Album of former teachers and students of the Livonian high school Emperor Alexander II in Birkenruh. St. Petersburg 1903. p. 13 ( digitized version )