Sophien-Gymnasium and Realgymnasium
The Sophien-Gymnasium and Realgymnasium in Berlin was a municipal high school in the Spandauer Vorstadt in Berlin-Mitte , which was created in 1926 from the Sophien-Gymnasium and Sophien- Realgymnasium . It was named after the nearby Sophienkirche .
history
On April 24, 1865, the Sophien-Gymnasium was founded at Große Hamburger Straße 2. This required the rapid increase in population in front of the city in the area between Hamburger and Schönhauser Tor of the city wall . In 1867 the company moved to the new Wilhelminian school building at Weinmeisterstraße 15. The secondary school had its origins in the municipal high school in Steinstraße, house number 31/34, which was founded at Easter 1868 and whose first director was Heinrich Bertram . Both school buildings and the joint directorate building were built between 1865 and 1867 according to plans by Adolf Gerstenberg . At Easter 1871 the middle school became a first-class secondary school by adding a prima to it. From then on, this part of the school was called Sophien-Realschule like the adjoining grammar school. Since 1882 it was called the Sophien-Realgymnasium. The school ensemble was supplemented in 1875 by a new building for a girls' school, the municipal Sophien (daughters) school on the property at Weinmeisterstraße 16/17. In 1904 a gymnasium was built for all three schools on the neighboring property at Steinstrasse 29/30 based on a design by Ludwig Hoffmann . In 1924 the Sophien-Gymnasium moved to Mandelstrasse 2 and from 1926 it was developed into the Sophien-Gymnasium and Realgymnasium . From 1931 the high school part was dismantled. After the dissolution in 1935, the Heinrich Schliemann School was its successor. The Sophien-Realgymnasium remained in Steinstrasse and was developed into the Sophien-Reformrealgymnasium there from 1928 . From 1931 it was combined with the Friedrich Werderschen Oberrealschule , which had moved to the Weinmeisterstraße 15 building in 1928. Except for the directorate building, all buildings were largely destroyed during World War II. The elementary school Weinmeisterstraße was built on the old school grounds of the Sophiengymnasium from 1950 to 1953. The former directorate building now houses the youth culture center in the middle of the Weinmeisterhaus .
Sophiengymnasium
Known teachers
- Adolf Brecher (1836–1901), historian
- Rudolf Dahms (1839–1917), classical philologist
- Konrad Schottmüller (1841–1893), historian
- Oskar Seyffert (1841–1906), classical philologist
- Rudolf Eucken (1846–1926), philosopher and Nobel Prize winner
- Ferdinand Georg Frobenius (1849–1917), mathematician
- Hugo Magnus (1851–1924), classical philologist
- Rudolf Schneider (1852–1911), military historian
- Max Wallies (1856–1925), classical philologist
- Bruno Keil (1859–1916), classical philologist
- Wolfgang Passow (1863–1901), classical philologist
- Ernst Samter (1868–1926), classical philologist
- Alfred Homeyer (1888–1962), German politician ( FDP )
- Walter Schönbrunn (1889–1960), literary didactician
Known students
- Fedor Krause (1857-1937), neurosurgeon
- Hugo Preuss (1860–1925), constitutional law teacher
- Hans Koch (1861–1945), classical philologist, high school teacher in East Prussia and Berlin
- Carl Fraenkel (1861–1915), medical researcher on infectious diseases and bacteriologist
- Richard Dehmel (1863–1920), poet and writer
- Jacques Joseph (1865–1934), plastic surgeon
- Edmund Neuendorff (1875–1961), German educator and Nazi sports leader
- Wilhelm Lewy (1876–1949), rabbi and Zionist, co-founder of the first Jewish gymnastics and sports club in Germany
- Willy Boehm (1877–1938), Marine Senior Physician, Member of the Prussian State Parliament
- Max Marcuse (1877–1963), dermatologist and sexologist
- Willy Katz (1878–1947), doctor
- Fritz Böhm (1880–1943), folklorist
- Paul Schmidt-Branden (1885–1955), bank manager
- Arthur Kronfeld (1886–1941), psychiatrist
- Fritz Kahn (1888–1968), doctor and author of popular science books
- Abraham Michalski (1889–1961), rabbi
- Ernst Lubitsch (1892–1947), German-American film director and actor
- Lothar Mendes (1894–1974), film director and screenwriter
- Georg Manasse (1893–1980), entrepreneur, social democrat and pacifist
- Conrad Veidt (1893–1943), actor
- Leo Kanner (1894–1981), Austro-American child and youth psychiatrist
- Joseph Bornstein (1899–1952), journalist
- Hans Feld (1902–1992), film critic
Sophien-Realgymnasium
Known teachers
- Albert Wangerin (mathematician) (1844–1933), mathematician
- Anton Oberbeck (1846–1900), physicist
- Paul Schafheitlin (1861-1924), mathematician
Well-known students
- Eduard Zache (1862–1929), geologist and educator
- Otto Baschin (1865–1933), geographer and meteorologist
- Martin Richter (1869–1930), administrative lawyer
- Carl Junack (1870–1943), German forester, inventor and publicist
- Paul Weinrowsky (1874–1945), German physics teacher
- Sophie Jourdan (1875 – after 1944), physician
- Hedwig Jung-Danielewicz (1880–1942), doctor
- Willy Kurth (1881–1963), art historian
- Walter Draeger (1888–1976), composer
- Julius Jaenisch (1890 – after 1937), news anchor
- Erich Peter (1901–1987), conductor
- Wolfgang Rösser (1914–2007), NDPD functionary and member of the People's Chamber
Individual evidence
- ^ Annual report on the municipal higher citizen school . Berlin 1869 ( full text ).
- ^ Sophien Gymnasium, Berlin. In: Architekturmuseum TU Berlin. Retrieved December 20, 2019 .
- ^ Sophien Realschule, Berlin. In: Architekturmuseum TU Berlin. Retrieved December 20, 2019 .
- ↑ Headquarters building of the Sophien Gymnasium and Realschule, Berlin. In: Architekturmuseum TU Berlin. Retrieved December 20, 2019 .
- ^ Entry: Sophien-Gymnasium with Realgymn. i. E. In: Berliner Adressbuch von 1928, p. 137. Retrieved on December 21, 2019 .
- ^ Entry: Sophien-Realgymnasium (Reform-Rg. I. E.). In: Berliner Adressbuch von 1929, p. 138. Retrieved on December 21, 2019 .
literature
- Annual reports 1866–1870 ; 1871–1915 , digital copies of the university library of the Heinrich Heine University in Düsseldorf
- The Sophien-Gymnasium. In: Ludwig Wiese: The higher school system in Prussia, historical-statistical representation. Volume II (1864-1869), Berlin 1869, p. 124 f. ( limited preview of Google Books )
- Frieda Gossmann: Memorandum for the 50th anniversary of the Sopi School in Berlin. Velhagen & Klasing, Bielefeld 1926.
Web links
- Inventory overview of the Berlin State Archives: A Rep. 020-07
- Senate Department for Urban Development of the City of Berlin: Urban monument protection - Spandauer Vorstadt, Weinmeisterhaus; Weinmeisterstraße 15
- Entry in the Berlin State Monument List with further information
- Weinmeisterhaus is an open house for children, young people, art and culture in Berlin-Mitte
- Terracotta panels from the Bauakademie in the entrance gate of the former directorate building
Coordinates: 52 ° 31 ′ 32.2 " N , 13 ° 24 ′ 18.2" E