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Eberhard Hillebrand

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Occupation
  
Architect


Name
  
Eberhard Hillebrand

Eberhard Hillebrand

Full Name
  
Rudolph Eberhard Hillebrand

Born
  
30 April 1840
Osnabruck, Kingdom of Hanover

Spouse(s)
  
Louise von Sehlen (1878)

Children
  
Gretlies Hillebrand/Huncken and 4 recorded sons

Died
  
March 18, 1924, Hanover, Germany

Eberhard Hillebrand (30 April 1840 – 18 March 1924) was a German architect. Most of his surviving buildings are churches, many (but not all) of them in and around Hanover.

He also worked as a building contractor and city building inspector.

Life

Eberhard Hillebrand was born in Osnabrück. His father was a master butcher. After attending school locally Hillebrand went on to train in bricklaying and stonework construction between 1856 and 1859, while simultaneously undertaking a study course during the three winter semesters at the Building Academy in Nienburg.

He relocated to Hanover in 1859, working in an architectural practice for Ludwig Debo and Hermann Hunaeus. In the same year he enrolled to study Architecture at the Hanover Polytechnical Academy (as it was then known). He successfully completed these studies in 1863 and joined the large Architectural firm of Conrad Wilhelm Hase. In Autumn of that same year he moved south to Kassel, attending courses given at what was then the Kassel Higher Business Academy by Georg Gottlob Ungewitter on Neo-Gothic architecture. He was given a job by Ungewitter the same year, but permitted to set out on a study tour covering Germany and France. In November 1864 Ungewitter himself died suddenly. Hillebrand returned to his deceased employer's office, and for the next two years worked on the completion of the commissions that had been in progress when Ungewitter died.

In 1866 he took a post as a BauKonducteur (building inspector), later promoted to "Government Master Builder" in the Flensburg Building Inspectorate. He resigned in 1872 and returned to Hanover where he worked as a self-employed building contractor and, on 4 June 1878, married Louise von Sehlen: the marriage would produce four recorded sons. In 1883 he was appointed a city building inspector, responsible for the city's Central Construction Department. In 1887 he resigned at his own wish in order to work full-time as a freelance architect. During the ensuring two decades he designed a succession of Neo-Gothic Protestant church buildings.

Eberhard Hillebrand died at his home in Hanover on 18 March 1924.

References

Eberhard Hillebrand Wikipedia