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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.
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 ...
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.
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.
Isaac Thomas Hecker (1818-1889), Roman Catholic priest, founder of the Paulist Fathers; Jakob Hecker (1887-1969), German painter; Jan Hecker (1967-2021), German lawyer and diplomat; Johann Julius Hecker (1707-1768), a German educator who established the Berlin Realschule; Justus Hecker (1795-1850), German medical historian
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.
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 ...