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Johann Julius Hecker (December 2, 1707 – June 24, 1768) was a German educator who established the first Realschule (practical high school) and Prussia's first teacher-education institution. Biography
The basic foundations of a generic Prussian primary education system were laid out by Frederick the Great with his Generallandschulreglement, a decree of 1763 which was written by Johann Julius Hecker. Hecker had already before (in 1748) founded the first teacher's seminary in Prussia.
The school originated from a Realschule founded by the Pietist Johann Julius Hecker in 1747, the first secondary school in Berlin. On its 50th anniversary in 1797, the school was renamed after Friedrich Wilhelm III , who had succeeded his father as King of Prussia earlier in that year, and wanted to improve the successful secondary school.
Julius Hecker is the name of: Johann Julius Hecker (1707–1768), German educator; Julian F. Hecker (also known as Julius Hecker) (1881–1938), Russian-American ...
Johann Julius Hecker (1707–1768), the first pastor at Trinity Church. It also had a 22m diameter dome over the centre of the cross, consisting of a tiled wooden structure with an octagonal lantern that served as bell tower and internal decoration representing the Four Evangelists.
Johann_Julius_Hecker_(bust).JPG (312 × 560 pixels, file size: 59 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Johann Julius Hecker (1707-1768), a German educator who established the Berlin Realschule; Justus Hecker (1795-1850), German medical historian; Max Hecker (1879–1964), Austrian-born Israeli President of the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology; Maximilian Hecker (born 1977), German pop musician, publishing mostly on Berlin's Kitty-Yo label
In 1763 King Frederick the Great enacted a first Prussian general school law, elaborated by the theologian Johann Julius Hecker. Similar Volksschulen were established in the Electorate of Saxony and in the German-speaking parts of the Habsburg monarchy, backed by Johann Ignaz von Felbiger, through a system of state-supported primary one-room ...