Theodor Sartori

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Heinrich Friedrich Theodor Sartori (born July 26, 1835 in Nusse , † July 10, 1914 in Lübeck ) was a German architect and member of the Lübeck citizenship .

Life

origin

Theodor Sartori was a son of Gottfried Andreas Sartori (1797–1873), the pastor of the then Lübeck exclave Nusse .

His older brother was the educator August Sartori and the shipowner August Sartori was his cousin.

career

Satori learned the carpentry trade , acquired Lübeck citizenship in 1864 and has since worked as a carpentry master and architect . As such, he worked with the Lübeck architect Alfred Redelstorff.

Lübeck, Hüxstraße 7, drawing by Theodor Sartori before the demolition in 1861

In Lübeck, Satori acquired the house at lower Johannisstrasse 36/37 (today Dr.-Julius-Leber-Strasse 71) and lived there until his death. Like Alfred Redelstorff, he was a member of the Verein der Kunstfreunde in 1872. Since 1866 he was also a member of the Technical Association .

Society of Friends of Art Satori took part in the inclusion of brick architecture from Gothic and Renaissance in the Hanseatic city. At the end of 1897 he, Wilhelm Christian Cuwie , Wilhelm Brehmer , Hermann Baethcke and Ernst Stiller were elected as civil members of the joint commission for the tendering of the imperial monument . Johannes Daniel Benda and Julius Vermehren were appointed as substitutes for this . You should opt for a massive Uechtritz Kaiser Wilhelm monument . It was only Eduard Kulenkamp , chairman of the Society of Friends of Art , who succeeded in “liberating” the city from this. Kulenkamp was granted recognition by being appointed to the new commission for building regulations for an imperial monument.

Satori belonged to the Lübeck citizenship from at least 1898 to at least 1905.

Like his brother, Satori was a member of the Freemason Lodge Zur Weltkugel in Lübeck.

family

Satori had married Marie Henriette, daughter of Carl Alfred Brattström , in 1868 . Their son, Otto Andreas Friedrich (born February 13, 1870), emigrated to Argentina in 1890 .

Buildings and designs

Fonts

  • (Arrangement): German Renaissance: a collection of objects of architecture, decoration and applied arts in original recordings. Vol. 5, Dept. XLIII: Lübeck. Leipzig: Seemann, [1882].
  • New guide through Lübeck with special consideration of its architectural and art monuments. Edited from the work of building director A. Schwiening , government master builder Max Grube, Dr. Th. Hach , architect Th. Sartori. Lübeck: Nöhring 1896 (several editions)

literature

  • Lübeck State Handbook. Lübeck 1903.
  • Gustav Lindtke: Old Lübeck city views. Lübeck 1968, No. 255 and p. 106.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. His collection of photos of old town houses is in the picture archive of the St. Anne's Museum , see Michael Brix : Nuremberg and Lübeck in the 19th century. Preservation of monuments, preservation of the cityscape, urban redevelopment (= Studies on 19th Century Art , Volume 44.) Prestel, Munich 1981, ISBN 3-7913-0526-3 , p. 318.
  2. Local Notes. In: Lübeckische Blätter ; Volume 40, number 2, edition of January 9, 1898, p. 15.
  3. ^ Association of Art Friends. In: Lübeckische Blätter ; Volume 67, number 6, edition of February 9, 1902, p. 68.
  4. Freemaurer-Zeitung 41 (1887), p. 374