Anton-Bruckner-Gymnasium Straubing
Anton-Bruckner-Gymasium Straubing is the largest of four gymnasiums of Straubing in Bavaria by the number of students, the others being Johannes-Turmair-Gymnasium, Ludwigsgymnasium and Gymnasium der Ursulinen-Schulstiftung. It consists of a music and an economics branch.[2]
History
The school was established in 1824 as a teachers' training college. It was founded by Royal Decree of 4 September 1823 at the Jesuit College Straubinger on 1 November 1824, and expanded in 1833 by the construction of a residential building. In 1843, it moved to the former canon St. Jakob in Seminargasse.
In 1924, the college was declared a college of further education. In 1935, it was changed into the Deutsche Aufbauschule Straubing with 240 students. In 1953, it became a teacher training college again whilst retaining its secondary school activities. In 1956, the teacher training was relocated to Regensburg. In 1961, a new school building was opened.
In 1965, its name was changed to Anton-Bruckner-Gymnasium and the music branch was established. In 1976, the economics branch was added.[3]
Notable alumni
- Elli Erl, singer
- Gerold Huber, pianist
- Siegfried Mauser, pianist
- Kurt Raab, actor
- Peer Raben, composer
- Markus Weinzierl, football coach and former player
References
- ^ "Agnes Bernauer holte ihn heim nach Straubing". Cham. Mittelbayerische Zeitung. 28 July 2011. Retrieved 26 January 2013.
- ^ "Schulen". Adressenverzeichnisse. Stadt Straubing. Retrieved 26 January 2013.
- ^ "Schulgeschichte". Schulprofil. Anton-Bruckner-Gymnasium. Archived from the original on 30 June 2013. Retrieved 26 January 2013.
External links
- Website of Anton-Bruckner-Gymnasiums Straubing
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- Symphonies (1863–1896)
- Symphony in F minor (1863)
- No. 1 in C minor (1866/1891)
- Symphony in D minor (1869)
- No. 2 in C minor (1872/1877)
- No. 3 in D minor (1873/1877/1889)
- No. 4 in E♭ major (Romantic; 1874/1878–1880/1888)
- No. 5 in B♭ major (1876)
- No. 6 in A major (1881)
- No. 7 in E major (1883)
- No. 8 in C minor (1887/1890)
- No. 9 in D minor (1896) (unfinished)
- Four Orchestral Pieces (1862)
- Overture in G minor (1862–1863)
- March in E-flat major (1865)
- Symphonisches Präludium (1876)
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- Piano works (1850–1868)
- Chamber music (1862–1879)
- String Quartet (1862)
- Rondo in C minor (1862)
- Abendklänge (1866)
- String Quintet (1879)
- Intermezzo in D minor (1879)