Albert Woldemar Hollander
Born(1796-09-22)22 September 1796
Died6 March 1868(1868-03-06) (aged 71)
Birkenruh, Riga
NationalityLatvian; Baltic German
Occupation(s)educator and pedagog

Albert Woldemar Hollander (1796–1868), was a German educator and pedagog.

Hollander was born 22 September 1796 in Riga, Livonia to Johann Heinrich Hollander and Karoline Amalie Marg. (Stumpf), from a well-to-do and influential family in Riga.[1]

He attended first the Evangelical Grammar School to the Grey Monastery in Berlin, and then the Riga Gymnasium. From 1815 to 1819 he studied theology and philology at Dorpat, Jena and Berlin, and became a theological follower of Friedrich Schleiermacher. He became a member of the Urburschenschaft in 1816, and the Alte Berliner Burschenschaft in 1818; as a member of the Burschenschaft he took part in the 1817 Wartburg Festival.[1][2]

Hollander co-founded, with Leopold von Holst, a private educational institution in Fellin in 1820. He visited Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi's institute in Yverdon, Switzerland. Impressed by him, in 1825 he founded a large school and educational institution at Birkenruh (Bērzaine) in Cēsis, Livonia, which later became the Landesgymnasium Birkenruh (Birkenruh State Grammar School), which he ran until 1861.[1][2][3] The University of Jena awarded him an honorary doctorate in 1850.[2]

Hollander married Charlotte Dorothea Rathlef, daughter to Georg Ludwig Rathlef; the marriage produced 14 children. He died 6 March 1868 in Birkenruh as a result of a cold contracted while rescuing a farmer's wife who had been found frozen to death.[1]

Publications

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Hollander, Albert Woldemar", Deutsche Biographie. Retrieved 14 January 2021
  2. ^ a b c "Hollander, Albert Woldemar (1796-1868)", Baltisches biografisches Lexikon (Baltic Biographical Dictionary) BBLD. Retrieved 14 January 2021
  3. ^ "Vēsturiskais ievads" ("Historical introduction"), Cesu Internatpamatskola Rehabilitacijas Centrs (Czech Boarding Primary School Rehabilitation Centre), (in Latvian). Retrieved 14 January 2021