Samuel-von-Brukenthal-Gymnasium
Samuel-von-Brukenthal-Gymnasium | |
---|---|
type of school | high school |
founding | 1380 |
address |
Piața Albert Huet 5 |
place | Sibiu |
circle | Sibiu |
Country | Romania |
Coordinates | 45 ° 47 '50 " N , 24 ° 8' 59" E |
student | 861 |
Teachers | 56 |
management | Monika Hay |
Website | brukenthal.ro |
The Samuel-von-Brukenthal-Gymnasium ( Romanian : Colegiul Național "Samuel von Brukenthal" din Sibiu) is a German-speaking high school in Sibiu . The school was first mentioned in a document in 1380. This makes it the oldest German-speaking school in Romania .
In 1921 the school was given its current name in memory of Baron Samuel von Brukenthal , who was governor of the Principality of Transylvania between 1777 and 1787 . Until 1990 the grammar school was a school for the German minority in Romania. Although many Romanian Germans emigrated to Germany after 1990 , German is still taught in the Lyceum (grades 9–12) and high school (grades 5–8). The majority of the students now come from Romanian-speaking families. Today's school buildings were built between 1779 and 1781.
Personalities
Former students
- Johannes Lutsch (1607–1661), politician, Count of the Saxon Estates in Transylvania
- Michael Hißmann (1752–1758), philosopher and university professor
- Johann Georg Wenrich (1787–1847), Protestant theologian and university professor
- Stephan Ludwig Roth (1796–1849), pastor, writer and politician
- Friedrich Krasser (1818–1893), writer and doctor
- Emil Sigerus (1854–1947), folklorist and city historian
- Arthur Arz von Straussenburg (1857–1935), Chief of Staff of the Austro-Hungarian Army
- Friedrich Müller-Langenthal (1884–1969), theologian and historian
- Gustav Arthur Gräser (1879–1958), artist and dropout
- Karl Kurt Klein (1897–1971), journalist, theologian and historian
- Gustav Gündisch (1907–1996), historian and archivist
- Roland Phleps (1924–2020), sculptor, neurologist and psychiatrist
- Klaus Johannis (* 1959), politician and President of Romania
Teacher
- Johann Georg Wenrich (1787–1847), Protestant theologian and university professor
- Johann Michaelis (1813–1877), educator and Lutheran pastor