Home
Architecture
Art
Beauty/Health
Beer
Business/Economy
Cars
Celebrities
Christmas
Dictionaries
Education
Fashion/Clothes
Food
Galleries
Gays/Lesbians
Genealogy
German Names
Germans Abroad
History
Holidays
Homework Help
Learn German
Law
Literature
Loveparade
Movies
Music
Nazi
News
Oktoberfest
Philosophy
Today in History
Traditions
Travel to Germany
Wines
More topics...
Facts About Germany
Armed Forces
Education
Economy
History
Geography
Mass Media
Politics
Society
German History
Early History
Medieval History
Thirty Years' War
Weimar Republic
Third Reich
Postwar
Honecker Era
Berlin Wall
Bismarck
German Recipes
Salads
Main Dishes
Desserts
Baking
German Chocolate Cake
Easter Dishes
Halloween Dishes
Christmas Dishes
How To in Germany
Articles
Quizzes
|
September
22 in German History
---------------------------------
September 22
Feast day of St. Mauritius ( ? - ca. 302).
St. Mauritius (or St. Maurice) was one of the 66 Christian
legionnaires who was martyred after torture, refusing to pay
homage to the pagan gods. He was beheaded in St. Maurice,
Switzerland. The Augustinian monastery of St. Maurice stands
today at the site of the martyrdom. His designation as a
saint predates the formal practice of canonization by a Pope.
His feast day is September 22 in both the Catholic and
Lutheran traditions. In the Swiss farm legends it is said
that bad weather on St. Mauritius day foretells damage and
frustration. (Gewitter um Mauritius bringt Schaden und
Verdruss.)
September 22, 1499
The Peace of Basel concludes the final war
of Swiss independence. The Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire,
Maximilian I had attempted to retake Switzerland, but was
repulsed.
September 22, 1566
Death of Johann Agricola (Johann Schneider)
in Berlin. (He was a friend and supporter of Martin Luther).
Agricola became a strong proponent of the concept that
Christian grace replaces the Ten Commandments, which would no
longer, then, have force. These views led to a cooling of
relations with Luther. In 1584 Agricola was called upon to
draft the Augsburg agreement, which for a time settled
difficulties between Protestants and Catholics.
September 22, 1658
Death of Georg Philipp Harsdörfer in
Nürnberg, Germany. Harsdörfer was a Baroque poet and
theorist. In the Baroque period in Germany many literary
societies were founded to promote the arts. Harsdörfer was
one of the founders of one of the more important of these,
the Pegnitzer Hirtengesellschaft. His book on theory became
one of the more significant of the period, Poetischer
Trichter, die Teutsche Dicht und Reimkunst, ohne Behuf der
Lateinischen Sprache, in sechs Stunden einzugiessen. (Baroque
writers liked long titles.) Among his collections of poetry
is Pegnesisches Schäfergedicht (1644).
September 22, 1804
First production of Goethe's Götz von
Berlichingen in Weimar.
September 22, 1814
Death of August Wilhelm Iffland in Berlin,
Germany. In 1779 Iffland played the role of Franz Moor in
Friedrich von Schiller's Die Räuber. He remained in
Mannheim where he wrote plays, directed and acted. In 1798 he
became the manager of the Berlin National Theater and in 1811
was advanced to the director of all Prussian theaters. He
wrote his autobiography in 1798 Meine theatralische
Laufbahn.
September 22, 1880
Birth of Barthold Heinrich Brockes in
Hamburg, Germany. Brockes was a poet of the Enlightenment
period.
September 22, 1882
Birth of Wilhelm Keitel in Helmschrode,
Germany. He was head of Germany's armed forces during WWII.
He was completely loyal to Hitler. He was executed by the
Nürnberg court in 1946.
September 22, 1885
Birth of Erich von Stroheim in Vienna,
Austria. Von Stroheim was a film director and actor. He moved
to the United States in 1914. His first film was Blind
Husbands. Other notable films are Greed, The Merry
Widow, and Queen Kelly. He ultimately gave up
directing and returned to Europe as an actor. Stroheim died
in 1957.
September 22, 1905
Birth of Eugen Sänger in Pressnitz,
Austria-Hungary. Sänger was a rocket propulsion engineer. In
1933 he designed a high altitude rocket plane. He directed
the rocket program of the German Aviation Research Institute
from 1936-1945 and worked for the French from 1946-1954. He
ended his career as an instructor at the West Berlin
Technological University. Sänger died in 1964.
September 22, 1905
Birth of Hans Winter in Altenbögge,
Germany.
September 22, 1914
The German submarine U-9 sinks three
British cruisers near the Dutch coast. (WWI)
September 22, 1918
Birth of Hans Scholl in Ingersheim,
Germany.
September 22, 1960
Death of Melanie Klein in London, England
(born in Vienna, Austria). Klein specialized in the
psychoanalysis of children using free play with toys as a
method of analysis. She held a position at the Berlin
Psychoanalytic Institute before immigrating to England in
1926. Klein wrote, The Psychoanalysis of Children (1932),
Envy and Gratitude (1957) and Narrative of a Child
Analysis (1961).
September 22, 1965
Death of Othmar Herman Ammann in Rye, New
York (born in Schaffhausen, Switzerland). Ammann immigrated
to the United States in 1904 where he became a bridge
engineer. He was involved in the design and building of the
Queensboro bridge, the Hell Gate Bridge and the George
Washington Bridge in New York City. He was also involved in
building the Lincoln Tunnel and the Golden Gate Bridge in San
Francisco. He was the chief engineer of the Port of New York
Authority from 1930-37 and the New York director of
engineering from 1937-39.
September 22, 1973
Henry Kissinger, a German immigrant, is
sworn in as Secretary of State.
September 22, 1985
Death of Axel Springer in West Berlin, Germany. Springer was
the founder of the Axel Springer Verlag, one of the largest publishing companies
in Europe. He started with his father's paper, the Altonaer Nachrichten.
Important publications in the Springer group include, Die Welt, Bild-Zeitung,
Hamburger Abendblatt, Berliner Morgenpost, Ullstein Publishing and Propyläen
Publishing. In 1960 Springer moved his publishing headquarters from Hamburg
to Berlin in a protest over the division of Berlin.
September 22, 2002
German federal elections. The coalition of the
SPD and the Green party win a narow election. Gerhard Schröder
will continue as chancellor for another term. The candidate of the CDU/CSU
was Edmund Stoiber of Bavaria. In the election the SPD received 38.5%
of the vote, the CDU/CSU 38.5%, the Greens 8,6%, the FDP 7.4%, the PDS 4.0%
and others 3.0%.
Back to Today in German History Calendar
|
|