Ottokar Schupp

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Ottokar Wilhelm Schupp (born August 25, 1834 in Grebenroth , † May 1, 1911 in Wiesbaden-Sonnenberg ) was a pastor and popular writer .

Life

Schupp grew up in Grebenroth and Obernhof and attended high school in Wiesbaden . After completing his studies, he was given the parish in Espa in 1860 . The desolate conditions in his community, whose sons and daughters were sold to America, gave him the inspiration for the novel Hurdy Gurdy . From Obernhof, Schupp's second sphere of activity, the home of Schinderhannes , Miehlen , suggested the novel The Post Robbery von Würges . The chronicle of the Thirty Years' War written in Miehlen by Pastor Plebanus, the original of which is kept in the Wiesbaden State Archives, brought further inspiration . Schupp married in 1861. From 1868 to 1872 he was pastor in Walsdorf near Idstein . Here he wrote the novel Die Pfarrfrau von Heftrich about a victim of the witch hunt. Then he was pastor in Wiesbaden-Sonnenberg until his retirement in 1905 . Numerous works were still created there.

His son Julius Schupp also became a pastor and held the parish office in Anspach-Taunus from 1901 to 1932. The daughter Maria Carmen Schupp married the trombone pastor and later senior church councilor in Dresden Adolf Müller . Their youngest son Gottfried Müller became an important composer and worked as a lecturer in music theory at the Nuremberg Conservatory.

Others

Schuppstrasse in Wiesbaden-Sonnenberg is named after Ottokar Schupp.

stories

  • Hurdy-Gurdy. Pictures from a rural village. Bielefeld and Leipzig 1867 ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library)
  • The Freiherr vom Stein, the right cornerstone, the injustice cornerstone, the German people's gemstone. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1868
  • Louise, Queen of Prussia. Edited an image of life for the youth and the people. Wiesbaden 1869
  • Field Marshal Count Neithard von Gneisenau. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1870 ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library)
  • The wagoner's boy in the war. 1871
  • The little book from Father Arndt, the singer of German freedom and the prophet of German greatness and unity. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1872 ( digitized version of the Ernst-Moritz-Arndt University of Greifswald)
  • Fire after fire. 1873 ( digitized version of Regensburg University Library via EOD )
  • Friedrich Wilhelm, the great elector. The pioneer for Preusssen's and Germany's greatness. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1873
  • The city master Rülin Baarpfennig. Geibel, Altenburg 1873
  • In the ice. A Greenlandic story. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1875
  • The downpour in the Wiegenau. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1875
  • William of Orange the founder of Dutch freedom. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1875
  • In the bush. An Australian story. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1876 ( digitized version of the Regensburg University Library via EOD )
  • Among the counterfeiters. Childhood memories of an old gentleman. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1876 ( digitized version of the Regensburg University Library via EOD )
  • At the Zambezi. A story from Dr. Livingstone's journey of discovery in South Africa. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1877 ( digitized version )
  • The conquest of Wiesbaden in 1282 by the Eppensteiners. 1878 ( digitized version )
  • The tabunchik. A South Russian story. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1878 ( digitized version )
  • The Stanhub. A story. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1880 ( digitized version )
  • Crusades: Dudo by Rüdelin. A story from the time of the second crusade. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1881
  • The uncle in Batavia. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1881 ( digitized version )
  • Joseph in Egypt. A picture of life. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1883
  • The lost child. An emigration story for the German youth and the people. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1884
  • The Klemenskirche - a story from the time of the robber barons. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1885 ( digitized version of the University Library Frankfurt am Main)
  • The revenge is mine. A story. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1885 ( digitized version )
  • Among the ogres of Borneo. Niedner, Wiesbaden 1886 ( digitized version )
  • Theobald. A story from the Saxon Wars in the 8th century, 1887 ( digitized from the University Library Frankfurt am Main)
  • From the Rhine to the Danube. 1888 ( digitized version )
  • Kaiser Wilhelm I. Geibel, Altenburg 1889
  • In the dark valley. Geibel, Altenburg 1903 ( digitized version )
  • The national monument on the Niederwald. A story for the German youth and the people. Altenburg 1905 ( digitized version )
  • The creation of the Arnstein monastery. Geibel, Altenburg 1909 ( digitized version )
  • The pastor's wife von Heftrich. A true story based on the files of the Idstein archive
  • The postal robbery in Würges. A narrative based on oral and written records. Oranien-Verlag, Herborn ( digitized version )
  • Five works in one book with a total of 20 pretty steel engravings (from 1877 to 1879). Niedner, Wiesbaden 1878
    • The blind witness. A true story
    • The witch miller in the Wisper, a ghost story without ghosts ( digital copy of the Regensburg University Library via EOD )
    • The Meerlins. A village history ( digitized version )
    • The box office theft. A story based on facts from an imperial city ( digitized version of the Regensburg University Library via EOD )
    • The refugees in Steinthal. A story from the life of Oberlin ( digitized version )

Individual evidence

  1. Sonnenberger Echo, No. 48, 1986, pp. 3-7.
  2. ^ Ortssippenbuch Walsdorf by Helmuth Leichtfuß, Schulz-Kirchner, Idstein 1996
  3. The folk writer Ottokar Schupp , Heinrich Naumann, Echo der Heimat, Wiesbaden, 1975, Volume 37, pages 33-37.
  4. ^ Descendants of the former Sonnenberg pastor and folk writer Ottokar Schupp , Heinrich Naumann, Echo der Heimat, Wiesbaden, 1976, in volume 38