Neustädter School (Hanover)

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The Neustädter Schule in front of Hanover , also called Neustädter Knabenschule , was a Latin school for boys established in the Calenberger Neustadt in the 17th century .

history

Classes took place in the Marienkapelle , built in the late Middle Ages after the destruction of Lauenrode Castle in 1382 , after it had lost its purpose due to the construction of the Neustädter Hof- und Stadtkirche St. Johannis . The former sacred building was instead used from 1680 to teach the boys of the Neustadt and as a teacher's apartment. The house of the Neustädter court preacher and his garden were laid out in the former churchyard of the building. In the interior of the former church building, the epitaph of Jobst von Alten was still to be found in the classroom of the school in the 19th century .

One of the most remarkable creations of the Hanoverian painter Burchard Giesewell is the oil painting Die Neustädter Schule in Hanover , created at the time of the Kingdom of Hanover in 1830 , which was owned by the Municipal Gallery in the Lower Saxony State Museum Hanover and later moved to the Hanover Historical Museum .

Schulstrasse in Calenberger Neustadt was named “after the Neustadt school located there”.

In 1856 the former Marienkapelle was demolished because it could no longer serve its purpose as a school building.

Personalities

Rectors

Teacher

student

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c d e f Franz Rudolf Zankl: The Neustädter School in Hanover. Oil painting ... , in: Hannover Archive , sheet K 8
  2. a b Bernhard Dörries , Helmut Plath : Giesewell, Burchard , in this: Old Hanover 1500–1900 / The history of a city in contemporary images from 1500–1900. Fourth, improved edition, Heinrich Feesche Verlag Hannover, 1977, ISBN 3-87223-024-7 , p. 141
  3. ^ Christian Ludwig Albrecht Patje : How was Hanover? Or: Fragment from the previous state of the residence city of Hanover , Hanover: Gebrüder Hahn, 1817 (reprinted in Hanover-Döhren: Verlag Harro v. Hirschheydt, 1977, ISBN 3-7777-0899-2 ), p. 61; Digitized via Google books
  4. Sabine Wehking : DI 36 City of Hanover (1993) / No. 125 † Neustädter Marienkapelle 1568 on the page Deutsche Insschriften Online (DIO)
  5. ^ A b Hugo Thielen : Giesewell, Burkhard (Burchard) , in: Stadtlexikon Hannover , p. 221; limited preview in Google Book search
  6. Rudolph Ludwig Hoppe : History of the City of Hanover ... With two views and a floor plan , in Gothic script, script and print by Culemann, Hanover: Verlag der Hellwingschen Hofbuchhandlung (reprint of the edition from 1845 (= contributions to history, regional and folklore von Lower Saxony and Bremen , vol. 44), Hannover-Döhren: v. Hirschheydt, 1975, ISBN 978-3-7777-0889-8 and ISBN 3-7777-0889-5 ), p. 213; Digitized via Google books
  7. Georg Christoph Hamberger , Johann Georg Meusel : Fröbing (Johann Christoph) , in ders .: The learned Teutschland or Lexicon of the German writers now living , Volume 2, 5th, increased and improved edition, Lemgo: Verlag der Meyerschen Buchhandlung, 1796, P. 442f .; Digitized via Google books
  8. Franz Kössler: Jahns, Heinrich Christian , in ders .: Personal dictionary of teachers of the 19th century , volume Ibach - Jutrosinski from the site of the Justus Liebig University of Giessen
  9. ^ Franz Kössler: Niess, Adolf , in ders .: Personal dictionary of teachers of the 19th century , volume Naarmann - Nymbach ; as a PDF document from the Justus Liebig University in Giessen
  10. ^ Johann Christoph Salfeld : History of the royal school teacher seminarii and its Frey School in Hanover . Schlüter, Hannover 1800, p. 113 ( limited preview in the Google book search)
  11. ^ Heinrich Wilhelm Rotermund : Pardey (Ernst Aug.) , in Johann Christoph Adelung , Heinrich Wilhelm Rotermund: Allgemeines Gelehrten-Lexicon. Continuation and additions to Christian Gottlieb Jöcher's general lexicon of scholars, in which the writers of all classes are described according to their most distinguished life circumstances and writings, beginning with Johann Christoph Adelung and continued with the letter K by Heinrich Wilhelm Rotermund , supplementary volume 5: [Mor - Pfeif ] , Bremen: Johann Georg Heuse, 1816, column 1557–1558; Digitized via Google books

Coordinates: 52 ° 22 '17.1 "  N , 9 ° 43' 38.2"  E