Philipp von Nathusius

Philipp Engelhard Nathusius, since 1861: von Nathusius (November 5, 1815 in Althaldensleben – August 16, 1872 in Luzern) was a German publisher and founder of a charitable organization in Neinstedt.

Philipp Engelhard von Nathusius (1815–1872), Porträt from ar 1855, in: Bettina von Arnim: Julius Pamphilius und die Ambrosia[1]

Life

He was a son of the industrialist Johann Gottlob Nathusius. One of his brothers was Hermann von Nathusius. Nathusius grew up at the family estate in Althaldensleben. 1832 he started to work in the Nathusius-porcelain factory. Already as young man he was very interested in literature (his grandmother was the poet Philippine Engelhard). 1836 he met in Berlin Bettina von Arnim; with her he stayed several years in contact. She made him the main character in her novel Ilius Pamphilius und die Ambrosia.

He married 1841 Marie Scheele, later a well known novelist. The couple established 1847 a first charity home for orphans in Althaldensleben. Later he established a much bigger charitable organization in Neinstedt (today known as the "Neinstedter Anstalten"). 1849 Nathusius became editor in chief of the Volksblatt für Stadt und Land zur Belehrung und Unterhaltung. Since 1861 he acted as publisher of the weekly newspaper. Ten years later his son, Martin von Nathusius, became his successor. Another son was the politician Philipp von Nathusius, and a granddaughter the novelist Annemarie von Nathusius. 1861 Nathusius became ennobled, after several years illness he died 1872 during a convalescence in Switzerland.

Works

  • Fünfzig Gedichte, 1839
  • Ulrich von Hutten. Volksthümliche Betrachtungen des gegenwärtigen kirchlichen Streites in Deutschland, 1839
  • Noch fünfzig Gedichte, 1841
  • Lebensbild der heimgegangenen Marie Nathusius, geb. Scheele, 3 Bände, 1868/69
  • Dokumente und Umstände einer nicht zustandegekommenen Claudius-Biographie
gollark: Everyone knows that bad things are permitted to exist for a maximum of a year.
gollark: Also also, computer systems are fairly close to human performance on some tasks (I think image recognition and processing, and nowadays some text generation), and do much better on some others (chess, go, etc.).
gollark: Also, human brains are basically just special... biological things, with a bunch more processing power (in some ways) than current computers.
gollark: You said it "is not", but computers actually *do* exist as far as I can tell, though.
gollark: Prove it. Also define "thinks".

References

  1. Bettina von Arnim: Julius Pamphilius und die Ambrosia. Propyläen, Berlin 1920
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