Description: Konsistorium Hanover: Bestallung 1865 Teacher Bertram IN Dolgow (Wustrow)The description of this item has been automatically translated. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us. You are bidding on one appointment for one school teacher. Heinrich Friedrich Christian Bertram, previously a school teacher in Klein Breese, becomes School teacher in Dolgov appointed. Dolgow is now a district of the town of Wustrow (Wendland). -- Today there is the Café Bertram in Dolgow, possibly descendants of the teacher? Issued by Consistory Hanover on 5. October 1865, on behalf of King George V Signed by the director of the consistory Heinrich Bergman (1799-1877). Scope:one written on four pages (31.8 x 20.5 cm); on the last page table of contents ("Confirmatio for the school teacher HFCh. Bertram zu Dolgow, resp. Lüchow, dd 5. October 1865") and cost accounting. Condition:document folded several times, with massive tears in the fold (partially backed with adhesive tape on the reverse). Paper browned and somewhat stained.Bitte beacalso watch out for the pictures! Internal note: EVS 2108-2 About Heinrich Bergmann (source: wikipedia): Heinrich Bergman (* 13. January 1799 in Hanover; † 23 April 1887 ibid) was a German officer, politician, university curator, administrative lawyer, consistory director, Minister of Education, Privy Councilor and official. Life: Heinrich Bergmann was born in 1799 as the son of a military doctor in the residence city of the Electorate of Hanover, which had long been orphaned due to the personal union between Great Britain and Hanover and which, however, remained the seat of numerous central authorities. During the so-called "French period" he attended the Hanoverian Lyceum (later the Ratsgymnasium) in Hanover, but still as a teenager he entered the grammar school on 27. May 1814 as an ensign in the 2. line battalion of the King's German Legion. Only a little later he took part in the Battle of Waterloo as one of the youngest officers. After Heinrich Bergmann only took leave of what was now the Royal Hanoverian military in 1819, he began studying law at the Georg-August University in Göttingen and passed his state examination in law in 1821. A few years later, 1824 received a permanent position at the Hanoverian domain chamber. After a period as an assessor in Wennigsen am Deister, in 1831 he was appointed as a laborer in the ministry in Hanover and as a ministry officer. In 1834 he took over the 2. Official position in the Hanover office. In 1837 Bergmann worked as an assessor in the king's cabinet. Bergmann was involved in the municipal constitutions for the Hanoverian suburban communities; 1842 initially for the suburbs of Glocksee-Ohe and Linden; Then in 1843 for the suburb of Steintor and the “Aegidientor garden community”. Meanwhile, Heinrich Bergmann had already been appointed to the Konsistorialrat in Hanover in 1842 and was also appointed a member of the Hanover State Council in the same year. In 1844, Bergmann founded the elementary school teacher widow fund together with Ubbelohde, von Göben, Knocke, Meyer and Bödeker. From 1846 to 1851, Heinrich Bergmann gave numerous political science lectures to the then Crown Prince and later King George V. During the revolutionary years of 1848/49, Heinrich Bergmann became a member of the Estates Assembly of the Kingdom of Hanover from 1849,[2] and belonged to the second chamber there.[4] At the end of 1853 he was appointed Minister of Education in the newly created "Ministry Lütcken" under Prime Minister Eduard Christian von Lütcken. In this capacity, Bergmann worked as a curator at the University of Göttingen and was responsible, among other things, for the appointment of the mathematician Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet, who had worked in Berlin until then, as the successor to Carl Friedrich Gauss, who died in 1855. Also in 1855, Bergmann left the government with the title “Privy Councilor”. In the following year, 1856, Heinrich Bergmann was appointed director of the Hanoverian consistory as successor to the deceased von Derschau - but as such he could not "[...] prevent the catechism dispute of 1862." Heinrich Bergmann retired at the end of 1866. Bergmann lived for a total of 60 years in the house on the Langen Laube that his father-in-law had given him before he died in 1887. Bergmannstrasse: Heinrich Bergmann had his own house on Lange Laube. For this reason, Bergmannstraße, which was posthumously laid out in 1888 and where Bergmann also owned his own property, was named after the Royal Hanoverian Minister as a connection to Escherstraße in what is now the Mitte district. Fonts (selection) In 1868 Heinrich Bergmann wrote a typed autobiography.Life: Heinrich Bergmann was born in 1799 as the son of a military doctor in the residence city of the Electorate of Hanover, which had long been orphaned due to the personal union between Great Britain and Hanover and which, however, remained the seat of numerous central authorities. During the so-called "French period" he attended the Hanoverian Lyceum (later the Ratsgymnasium) in Hanover, but still as a teenager he entered the grammar school on 27. May 1814 as an ensign in the 2. line battalion of the King's German Legion. Only a little later he took part in the Battle of Waterloo as one of the youngest officers. During the revolutionary years of 1848/49, Heinrich Bergmann became a member of the Estates Assembly of the Kingdom of Hanover from 1849,[2] and belonged to the second chamber tLife: Heinrich Bergmann was born in 1799 as the son of a military doctor in the residence city of the Electorate of Hanover, which had long been orphaned due to the personal union between Great Britain and Hanover and which, however, remained the seat of numerous central authorities. During the so-called "French period" he attended the Hanoverian Lyceum (later the Ratsgymnasium) in Hanover, but still as a teenager he entered the grammar school on 27. May 1814 as an ensign in the 2. line battalion of the King's German Legion. Only a little later he took part in the Battle of Waterloo as one of the youngest officers. During the revolutionary years of 1848/49, Heinrich Bergmann became a member of the Estates Assembly of the Kingdom of Hanover from 1849,[2] and belonged to the second chamber tLife: Heinrich Bergmann was born in 1799 as the son of a military doctor in the residence city of the Electorate of Hanover, which had long been orphaned due to the personal union between Great Britain and Hanover and which, however, remained the seat of numerous central authorities. During the so-called "French period" he attended the Hanoverian Lyceum (later the Ratsgymnasium) in Hanover, but still as a teenager he entered the grammar school on 27. May 1814 as an ensign in the 2. line battalion of the King's German Legion. Only a little later he took part in the Battle of Waterloo as one of the youngest officers. During the revolutionary years of 1848/49, Heinrich Bergmann became a member of the Estates Assembly of the Kingdom of Hanover from 1849,[2] and belonged to the second chamber t Erscheinungsort Hannover Region Europa Material Papier Sprache Deutsch Autor Heinrich Bergmann Original/Faksimile Original Genre Recht Eigenschaften Erstausgabe Eigenschaften Signiert Erscheinungsjahr 1865 Produktart Handgeschriebenes Manuskript
Price: 32.69 USD
Location: Berlin
End Time: 2024-11-20T06:08:56.000Z
Shipping Cost: 4.13 USD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 60 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Author: Heinrich Bergmann
Material: Paper
Place of Publication: Hanover
Region: Europe
Properties: First Edition, Signed
Product Type: Handwritten Manuscript
Original/Facsimile: Original
Genre: Right
Year Of Publication: 1865
Language: German
Brand: Unbranded
MPN: Does not apply