You are bidding on one Transcript from 1850 out of Berlin.


Issued byDr. Carl Julius Gerlach (1811-1886), Head of onePrivate daughter school in Berlin, for him Teacher Gustav Hinneberg (1827-1888), father of the historian and publicist Paul Hinneberg (1862-1934), who was Organizer and publisher of the major encyclopedic work “The Culture of the Present”.


DatedBerlin, the 7th December 1850.


Transcription:"The teacher, Mr. Hinneberg, has been on his behalf since the 15th. October the Younger taught in my girls' school and made himself commendable through his diligence and punctuality, no less than through his use of appropriate discipline and the good results of his teaching. Dr. CJ Gerlach."


Signed "Dr. CJ Gerlach."


Format: 25.8 x 21.3 cm.


About the author and recipient:

Dr. phil. Carl Julius Gerlach was born in Bromberg in 1811 as the eldest son of the master bookbinder Karl Gerlach and Johanna. Ickier was born and died on the 4th. June 1886 in the Dalldorf mental asylum (forerunner of the Karl Bonhoeffer mental hospital in Berlin) as a former school principal. On 2. In October 1842 his first marriage was to Caroline Luise Auguste Schmidt (* 1807), daughter of the Berlin field postmaster Friedrich August Schmidt; then Emilie, née. Gebhardt, who died before him. He lived in Berlin until the end.

He was the editor of the short-lived magazine "The Warte of Religious Freedom and Toleration" (Berlin 1845), of which only the first issue was published.

In 1843 he received official approval to run a girls' school in the St. Petri Parish of Berlin.


Gustav Hinneberg was on the 16th December 1827 in Bruchhagen near Greiffenberg (Uckermark) as the son of the teacher and sexton Carl Ludwig Hinneberg and Charlotte, née. Voigt was born and attended the school teacher seminar in Potsdam. From 1848 to 1850 he was 4th. teacher at the city school in Greiffenberg (Uckermark) and tutor for the local pastor Gustav Fittbogen (1808-1885); he also worked there as an organist and choir director. In 1850 he moved to Berlin and taught for a few months as a substitute at Dr. CF Gerlach; In 1851 he taught at the parochial church school in Berlin and from 1852 at the boys' and daughters' school of CG Hennig in Berlin, Schumannstr. 9. In 1853 he passed the organ examination in the Köpenick seminar.

In October 1852 he married Ida Paulick (née) in Berlin. on 2. July 1832 in Görlsdorf (Angermünde), died. 3. June 1905 in Berlin), daughter of the art gardener Georg Paulick.

From New Year's Day 1855 he was a teacher and sexton in Felchow near Angermünde and returned to Berlin in the 1860s, where he worked as a newspaper forwarder 14. Died in December 1888.

The historian and journalist Paul Hinneberg (1862-1934) was his son.


Condition:document folded; Paper browned, stained and slightly wrinkled. bplease note the pictures too!

Internal note: Hinneberg Novooo Brandenburg


About the recipient's son (source: wikipedia & NDB):

Paul Hinneberg (*16. March 1862 in Felchow near Angermünde; † 21. April 1934 in Berlin) was a German historian and journalist.

Live and act:Paul Hinneberg studied political science and philosophy in Berlin. In 1888 he received his doctorate in Halle on the philosophical foundations of historical science. Since 1885 he worked as Leopold von Ranke's private secretary. After his death he published the seventh volume of World History. Hinneberg found his position in life in 1892 when he took over the publishing of the Deutsche Litteraturzeitung, an important review magazine.

Today, Hinneberg is best known as the organizer and editor of the major encyclopedic work The Culture of the Present, which appeared in numerous volumes from 1905 to 1926. He also founded the monograph series The Scientific World View.

Due to the various editorial functions and based on his personal connection to the ministerial director Friedrich Althoff, Hinneberg exerted a not insignificant degree of influence on German science and university policy in the Empire.

Works (selection)

The philosophical foundations of historical science. In: Historical magazine. Jg. 63 (1889), p. 18 ff. (Dissertation, Halle, 1888)


Hinneberg, Paul, scientific editor, * March 16, 1862 Felchow near Angermünde, † June 20, 1934 Berlin. (evangelical)

genealogy:V Gustav, sexton and teacher in Felchow near Angermünde;

M Ida Paulick.

Biography: H. studied political science and philosophy in Berlin (PhD in Halle 1888), was Ranke's employee since 1885, gave 7th place. volume of its world history (1886) and in 1892 joined the editorial team of the “Deutsche Literaturzeitung” (DLZ), which can be traced back to 1880 as a scientific review magazine under various editors (Roediger). Under his editorship (since 1892) and under the supervision of a commission from the German scientific academies, the DLZ (including an extensive bibliography of new publications) appeared as a “weekly for criticism of international science” and gained a worldwide reputation. – In addition to his work for the DLZ, H. realized his big plan for a scholarly encyclopedia around the turn of the century: “Contemporary culture, its development and its goals”. The edition, which consisted of more than 40 volumes, was taken over by the Teubner publishing house in Berlin and Leipzig. The aim was to provide a systematically structured overall representation of the culture of the time. The great scholars of the time were recruited as collaborators. F. Paulsen and H. Diels, among others, worked on the introductory volume: “The General Foundations of Contemporary Culture” (1906, ²1912). A. von Harnack, G. Bezold, U. von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, F. Morf, W. Meyer-Lübke contributed to further volumes. The 1st World War II prevented the work from being completed. After the war years and inflationary difficulties, H. renewed this plan to present contemporary culture by publishing a new series of monographs under the title “The Scientific World View,” which was published by Quelle and Meyer in Leipzig. However, the death of the editor, who had made a name for himself as a scientific organizer, brought the company to a premature end.

factories

More W The phil. Basics d. History, Diss. Hall 1888 (partial version, continued. in: HZ 63, 1889).

Biography: H. studied political science and philosophy in Berlin (PhD in Halle 1888), was Ranke's employee since 1885, gave 7th place. volume of its world history (1886) and in 1892 joined the editorial team of the “Deutsche Literaturzeitung” (DLZ), which can be traced back to 1880 as a scientific review magazine under various editors (Roediger). Under his editorship (since 1892) and under the supervision of a commission from the German scientific academies, the DLZ (including an extensive bibliography of new publications) appeared as a “weekly for criticism of international science” and gained a worldwide reputation. – In addition to his work for the DLZ, H. realized his big plan for a scholarly encyclopedia around the turn of the century: “Contemporary culture, its development and its go