Philologe Albert Raven: Postcards Berlin 1892 An Verlag Dieterich Wg Corrections

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You bid on two postcards from 1892 the end Berlin.


thePhilologist and high school teacher at the Luisengymnsium Dr. Albert Rabe contacts because of flag corrections to the Dieterich'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung in Göttingen.


Certainly related to his work "The Editors of the Demosthenic Wreath Speech", which was published by this publisher in the same year.


Dated(according to postmark) Berlin, 20. and 30 Sep 1892.


Used in each case as a postal stationery (9.2 x 13.8 cm). On flexible paper.


Condition:paper browned and stained; corners bumped; the second card with pinprick and edge damage. BPlease note also the pictures!

Internal note: FM 210613 in EVS 2106


About the publisher (source: wikipedia):

Dieterich'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung is a German publishing house, today based in Mainz.

History: It goes back to Johann Christian Dieterich (1722-1800), who took over a bookshop in Gotha in 1752. In 1760 he opened a branch in Göttingen, where he became a university bookseller in 1765 and in 1770 attached a printing shop to the bookshop. In 1776 he moved to Göttingen. One of the most famous authors of this house was Georg Christoph Lichtenberg, other authors were Christian Gottlob Heyne, Johann Tobias Mayer and numerous other scholars from Göttingen. After the death of Johann Christian Dieterich, the bookshop and publishing house passed to his son Heinrich Dieterich (1761–1831), who, however, led the company into a financial crisis. In 1824 his son Hermann Dieterich (1797–1847) took over the publishing house. In 1847 he was sold to Wilhelm Vogel, a son of Friedrich Christian Vogel, in Leipzig and Friedrich Schlemmer (1799-1878) from Bayreuth, who, however, went bankrupt in 1865. The printing works were separated, and in 1886 the bookshop and antiquarian bookshop became independent. The publishing house, which had been dormant until then, was acquired by Theodor Weicher in 1897 and moved to Leipzig in 1898, where it was continued as Dieterich'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung Theodor Weicher.

In 1916, after insolvency, Weicher had to sell the publishing house to Max Hofmann (1886–1967), and in 1917 Max Heinemann (1882–1944) became the owner with equal rights.[1] At the beginning of 1928, the two had to sell the publishing house to the Leipzig commission house Carl Friedrich Fleischer for economic reasons. Its owner Wilhelm Klemm, who was also the managing partner of the Alfred Kröner publishing house, continued to run the publishing house. Heinemann remained active in the publishing house, Hoffmann founded his own publishing house from the geographic department of the Dieterisch'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung. In 1937, Rudolf Marx (1899–1990), who had previously worked at Kröner Verlag, became a co-owner. In the same year, Klemm and Marx began publishing the Dieterich Collection, which during the National Socialist period felt committed to the humanistic tradition with its philosophical, cultural-historical and literary volumes. After Klemm was expelled from the Reichsschrifttumskammer in 1938 and thus professionally banned, Marx continued to run the publishing house on his own. A total of 65 volumes were published in the Dieterich Collection by 1944, after which the publishing house had to cease work due to the destruction caused by the war.

After the end of the Second World War, the publishing house and the Dieterich Collection continued to exist in a split form: Rudolf Marx continued to run the publishing house in Leipzig, the Leipzig volumes in the series continued to be looked after by Marx in the GDR, and in 1977 the publishing house was incorporated into the Gustav Kiepenheuer Verlag . Wilhelm Klemm moved to Wiesbaden in 1945 and continued his publishing activities there, where he published 18 more volumes. In 1955, in financial difficulties, he had to sell the volumes of the Dieterich Collection that he was still responsible for to the Carl Schünemann Verlag in Bremen. Dieterich'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung in Wiesbaden has been dormant since 1956.

In 1982, Alfred Klemm, a chemist and son of Wilhelm Klemm, re-established Dieterich'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung in Mainz. The publishing house was managed by his wife Hannelore Klemm († 2014), his successor was the daughter Imma Klemm-Ortheil, wife of Hanns-Josef Ortheil. Lichtenberg's philosophical, cosmopolitan spirit and the aspirations of the Dieterich Collection were the guiding principles that emerged in view of the role of the book at the end of the 20th century. and early 21st century were to be reinterpreted. While the first volume of the new publishing program, which appeared in 1985, was still devoted to Wilhelm Klemm's treasure trove of German poetry, the second volume already stretched the bow to Japan.

archive:The part of the archive of the Dieterich'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung located in Leipzig is part of the archive of the Gustav Kiepenheuer Verlag Leipzig as a nationally valuable archive under cultural property protection.[2] The archive material has been on deposit in the Saxon State Archives in Leipzig since 1996.

In 1916, after insolvency, Weicher had to sell the publishing house to Max Hofmann (1886–1967), and in 1917 Max Heinemann (1882–1944) became the owner with equal rights.[1] At the beginning of 1928, the two had to sell the publishing house to the Leipzig commission house Carl Friedrich Fleischer for economic reasons. Its owner Wilhelm Klemm, who was also the managing partner of the Alfred Kröner publishing house, continued to run the publishing house. Heinemann remained active in the publishing house, Hoffmann founded his own publishing house from the geographic department of the Dieterisch'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung. In 1937, Rudolf Marx (1899–1990), who had previously worked at Kröner Verlag, became a co-owner. In the same year, Klemm and Marx began publishing the Dieterich Collection, whi
In 1916, after insolvency, Weicher had to sell the publishing house to Max Hofmann (1886–1967), and in 1917 Max Heinemann (1882–1944) became the owner with equal rights.[1] At the beginning of 1928, the two had to sell the publishing house to the Leipzig commission house Carl Friedrich Fleischer for economic reasons. Its owner Wilhelm Klemm, who was also the managing partner of the Alfred Kröner publishing house, continued to run the publishing house. Heinemann remained active in the publishing house, Hoffmann founded his own publishing house from the geographic department of the Dieterisch'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung. In 1937, Rudolf Marx (1899–1990), who had previously worked at Kröner Verlag, became a co-owner. In the same year, Klemm and Marx began publishing the Dieterich Collection, whi
In 1916, after insolvency, Weicher had to sell the publishing house to Max Hofmann (1886–1967), and in 1917 Max Heinemann (1882–1944) became the owner with equal rights.[1] At the beginning of 1928, the two had to sell the publishing house to the Leipzig commission house Carl Friedrich Fleischer for economic reasons. Its owner Wilhelm Klemm, who was also the managing partner of the Alfred Kröner publishing house, continued to run the publishing house. Heinemann remained active in the publishing house, Hoffmann founded his own publishing house from the geographic department of the Dieterisch'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung. In 1937, Rudolf Marx (1899–1990), who had previously worked at Kröner Verlag, became a co-owner. In the same year, Klemm and Marx began publishing the Dieterich Collection, whi
Erscheinungsort Berlin
Material Papier
Sprache Deutsch
Autor Albert Rabe
Original/Faksimile Original
Genre Literatur
Eigenschaften Erstausgabe
Eigenschaften Signiert
Erscheinungsjahr 1892
Produktart Handgeschriebenes Manuskript