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Certificate Baugewerkschule Höxter 1881 For A.Jaster; Signature Karl Möllinger

$ 30.55

Availability: 52 in stock
  • Period of Manufacture: 1851-1900
  • Condition: Used
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  • Product Type: Certificate & Certificate
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    Description

    Certificate Baugewerkschule Höxter 1881 For A.Jaster; Signature Karl Möllinger
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    Semi-annual report
    the
    Building trade school Höxter
    of
    1881.
    The building trade school Höxter was the first Prussian building trade school; It was from this that today's Ostwestfalen-Lippe University developed.
    Signed by the founder and director of the building trade school Möllinger.
    Karl Möllinger (* 14. April 1822 in Grünstadt; † 5. March 1895 in Höxter; also Carl Möllinger) was a German architect and architecture teacher.
    Dated Höxter, 20. August 1881 (for school attendance from November 1878 to March 1879).
    Format:
    33 x 21.2 cm.
    Mounted on cardboard; Cardboard creased lengthways in the middle.
    Issued to the bricklayer and later architect / construction technician Alfred Jaster, b. 26. September 1861 in Berlin as the son of the carpenter Wilhelm Julius Jaster and Caroline, b. Matthias, d. 5. March 1933. Training at the building trade school Höxter. In the mid-1880s he was a building supervisor for the construction of the Berlin sewer system (Radialsystem VI). In 1888 he married Auguste Baumgarten, born in Berlin. 11. June 1864 in Rudolstadt, daughter of the pastry chef Carl Baumgarten in Rudolstadt and Christiane, b. Danz (d. 1905 in Rudolfstadt).
    Jaster built Luitpoldstrasse 5-6 in Berlin-Schöneberg in 1898 and Geisbergstrasse 40 in 1899 (both are now cultural monuments). On the occasion of Jaster's 70th anniversary of his death on March 5, 2003, the following was said about the first house: "Many simplifications of facades damaged the old buildings in the 50s and 60s. This was later "repaired" with (well-intentioned, but often critically appreciated) "historicizing" facade cladding and paintings. Nevertheless, this Schöneberg house from 1898 is worthy of a monument. It is a representative house that clearly shows the rapid development of the northern part of Schöneberg after the incorporation of Berlin in 1861. This house and Luitpoldstrasse are located south of the Black Trench, a largely undeveloped land until the end of the 1880s that belonged to the Berlinische Boden-Gesellschaft - the Georg Haberland real estate company that was one of the most influential companies of the late 19th century. and beginning 20. Century belonged. Alfred Jaster was the client and architect. A pretty quick one, by the way: On the 24th. Construction began on February 7th, 1898. In April the shell was finished, in September the whole house, which shows various stucco window canopies in the style of neo-renaissance to neo-baroque. Alfred Jaster was born in 1861, he died 70 years ago today. "
    Status:
    With major flaws: drawn up on cardboard, creased lengthways in the middle. Folded, badly stained and discolored, with marginal damage. Remnants of paper strips at the edge of the sheet (was obviously once in a booklet or something similar) glued in). Please also note the pictures!
    At the same time, I am offering further documents from the Jaster family of architects!
    About Möllinger (source: wikipedia):
    Karl Möllinger (* 14. April 1822 in Grünstadt; † 5. March 1895 in Höxter; Carl Möllinger) was a German architect and architecture teacher who founded the first Prussian building trade school in Höxter in 1864, from which today's Ostwestfalen-Lippe University developed.
    Life: Karl Möllinger was born in Grünstadt, in the Bavarian Palatinate. His parents were Jacob Moellinger and Maria née Würz. After he had gone through the schools in Grünstadt and Germersheim, he found a job in fortress construction in Germersheim, where he became more and more familiar with the building trade. Finally, he studied construction at the Munich Polytechnic, graduated and began working as an architect there, which he later relocated to his native Palatinate.
    As early as 1846 Möllinger published the books at the Roller publishing house in Munich: “Elements of the pointed arch style; systematically developed according to the most excellent architectural and art monuments from the heyday of the Middle Ages "and shortly thereafter" elements of the round arch style for schools and for technical purposes, as well as instructions for self-teaching for architects, sculptors, painters, stone masons, etc., along with a collection of excellent buildings and Art monuments from the Middle Ages and the most recent times ”. Both books specifically conveyed detailed practical experience, especially in the neo-Gothic and neo-Romanesque architectural styles.
    In a modern book it says about it:
    "
    In the same year, Karl Möllinger published a textbook for arched architecture as a counterpart to "Elements of the Pointed Arch Style". The term round arch does not refer to the Romanesque world of forms, but a stylistic conglomerate of ancient, Romanesque and early Gothic elements. They show precise, purely geometrically captured drawings in elevations, sections and details. The spectrum ranges from facade elevations to [...] window and door openings, tracery, profiles, cornices and battlements, gallery and balcony grilles, etc. "
    -
    Claudia Grund: German-language master works of the 19th Century to the neo-Romanesque and neo-Gothic. Harrassowitz, Wiesbaden 1997.
    In order to increase the awareness of his creations and ideas and to be able to better influence the contemporary style, Karl Möllinger went as a teacher in 1856 at the then very renowned building trade school Friedrich Ludwig Haarmanns in Holzminden, in the Duchy of Braunschweig. He worked here until 1863, then moved to Höxter and founded his own building trade school there in 1864. The institute opened on 14. November 1864; 94 residents of the city of Höxter had assumed financial responsibility for the private educational institution as guarantors. The Höxter building trade school was the first of its kind in what was then the Kingdom of Prussia. On the 1st In April 1869 the sponsorship of the school was transferred to the city of Höxter; its founder, architect Karl Möllinger, remained director until 1888. With date from 1. In October 1876 the building trade school came under the supervision of the Prussian Ministry of Commerce and Industry. Through a contract between the Kingdom of Prussia and the city of Höxter, the institution was nationalized in 1885 and was now called the Royal Prussian Building Trade School Höxter. Möllinger worked in Höxter as director and teacher of his institute for 24 years until 1888, teaching generations of students his diversity of forms. In 1891 he published the textbook with Seemann in Leipzig: “The German-Romanesque architecture in its organic development up to the end of the 12th century. Century. “In the last years of his life he had to be looked after by his wife and died in Höxter in 1895.
    Höxter had become Möllinger's second home and he was one of its most respected citizens. That is why a monument was erected for him there with a portrait bust, created by Ernst Habs. It was on 7. Inaugurated in March 1897, which was even reported by the press in the Palatinate at the time. In Höxter there is a Möllingerplatz and a Möllingerstraße, which are named after the Palatinate architect.
    The building trade school founded by Karl Möllinger developed into a technical college and eventually became the Ostwestfalen-Lippe University of Applied Sciences. The man from Palatinate laid the foundation for Höxter to be a university town.
    In order to increase the awareness of his creations and ideas and to be able to better influence the contemporary style, Karl Möllinger went as a teacher in 1856 at the then very renowned building trade school Friedrich Ludwig Haarmanns in Holzminden, in the Duchy of Braunschweig. He worked here until 1863, then moved to Höxter and founded his own building trade school there in 1864. The institute opened on 14. November 1864; 94 residents of the city of Höxter had assumed financial responsibility for the private educational institution as guarantors. The Höxter building trade school was the first of its kind in what was then the Kingdom of Prussia. On the 1st In April 1869 the sponsorship of the school was transferred to the city of Höxter; its founder, architect Karl Möllinger, remained d
    Produkttyp
    Urkunde & Zeugnis
    Herstellungszeitraum
    1851-1900