Caspar Friedrich Hachenberg (14 December 1709 (baptised) – 1 April 1793), was rector of the Latin School of Wageningen, The Netherlands (1740–1789) and writer of Greek and Latin grammars.
Latin | high school | Latin America | Harvard Business School | London School of Economics | Harvard Medical School | secondary school | Harvard Law School | Eastman School of Music | Juilliard School | Public school (government funded) | High School Musical | Gymnasium (school) | Yale Law School | Rugby School | school district | high school football | public school | school | New York University School of Law | Westminster School | Tisch School of the Arts | Charterhouse School | Harrow School | University-preparatory school | Naval Postgraduate School | Glasgow School of Art | University of Michigan Law School | Manhattan School of Music | Guildhall School of Music and Drama |
In September 1588, he founded his first school, a Latin school in an abandoned monastery in Schüttorf.
He subsequently attended the Lateinschule (Latin School) in Lauffen and then the Karlsgymnasium in Heilbronn.
After studying theology at Tübingen, he devoted himself to teaching, became rector of a Latin school in 1845, and professor at the gymnasium of Heilbronn in 1849, having in the meanwhile been a delegate to the Frankfurt Parliament in 1848.
As private Latin school founded at 1550, the school has grown into one of the biggest schools in the Hochtaunuskreis.
In 1536, William I, Count of Nassau-Dillenburg charged Saxon educator and theologian Erasmus Sarcerius with the task of establishing a Latin school.
He was educated at the Latin school at Hechingen, at the Lyceum of Rastatt, and later at Sasbach.
In 1597, Albrecht was sent to the Protestant Latin school at Goldberg (now Złotoryja) in Silesia, where the then German environment led him to hone his German language skills.
Bernard of Utrecht (also Bernard d'Utrecht, Latinised Bernardus Ultrajectensis) was a cleric of the late eleventh century, known for an allegorical commentary on the Ecloga of Theodulus, a standard Latin school text.
In 1999 she was described as providing "inspirational leadership" at the Royal Latin School by John Bercow MP, in the House of Commons.
A native of Boston, Massachusetts, Tuckerman was educated at that city's Latin School.
Janner completed his schooling at the Latin school of Amberg.
After the bankruptcy of his art shop, he opened a Latin school on the Singel.
After visiting the Latin school in Arnstadt he studied at the University of Erfurt starting from 1633 in the Arts Faculty and in Jena with Damiel Stahl.
After completing his studies he taught for a short time in the Latin school at Lunden in Dithmarschen; he was then sent by his family to Cologne to convert to Protestantism a kinsman who had become Catholic.
Founded before 1280 as Schola Duisburgensis, the school was transformed into a Latin school in 1559, which today's Landfermann-Gymnasium acknowledges as its official founding year.
At the age of fourteen he entered the Latin School of Leutkirch and attended successively those of Ehingen and Tübingen.
He is on the Board of Trustees at The Latin School of Chicago and chairs the Gotham chapter of the Young Presidents’ Organization (YPO) chapter in New York City.
He attended Chauncey Hall, the Boston Latin School, and Yale College where he was a member of Skull and Bones in 1841.
His son Cornelis Schrevel, 1608-1661, linguist and rector of the Latin school in Leiden