Friedrich Ludwig Persius

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Friedrich Ludwig Persius
Ludwig Persius, in 1840, drawn by Friedrich Jentzen.
Born(1803-02-15)15 February 1803
Died12 July 1845(1845-07-12) (aged 42)
Potsdam
NationalityPrussian
OccupationArchitect
PracticeAssociated architectural firm[s]
Potsdam-Babelsberg

Friedrich Ludwig Persius (15 February 1803 in Potsdam – 12 July 1845 in Potsdam) was a Prussian architect and a student of Karl Friedrich Schinkel.

Persius assisted Schinkel with, among others, the building of the

Church of Peace, and the Orangery and observation tower on the Ruinenberg opposite Sanssouci
Palace.

Life

Persius was born in Potsdam, where he went to public school and grammar school. From 1817 to 1819 he worked with the building inspector Gotthil Hecker; he enrolled as a carpenter. From 1819 he studied to become a surveyor at the Academy of Architecture in Berlin, and took his exam in March 1821. From 1821 he worked as a building planner in Potsdam, working under, among others, Karl Friedrich Schinkel during the building of the castle and church on the grounds of Graf Potocki at Kraków. In 1824 Persius became a member of the Association of Architects. In Glienicke he worked as a successful architect under Schinkel. In 1826 he passed his exam to become a master builder at the Academy of Architecture in Berlin, and became a building planner in Charlottenhof.

In 1827 he married Pauline Sello (1808–1883), with whom he had six children: Elisabeth (1829–80), Ludwig (1832–1902), Marie (1834–47), Reinhold (1835–1912), Conrad (1836–1903) and Felix (1842–1885).

In 1829 Persius became a building inspector with the Royal Government in Potsdam. In 1833 he completed his first independent work, renovating the artificial mills (near the Roman Baths) into a residential house for Handmann, the gardener. In 1834 he became the Royal Court Building Inspector.

In 1840 he made a journey on the Rhine, that brought him to, among others,

Halle and thence to Erfurt
.

In 1841

Hermann von Pückler-Muskau
among others.

In 1843 he made a further journey on the Rhine, which included Bingen, Bad Godesberg and Trier. In 1844 he travelled to Bad Muskau and the Netherlands. In 1845 he undertook a journey to Italy via Nîmes, Marseille and Genoa to Rome, Naples, Vicenza, Padua, Venice and Verona.

In 1845 Persius was appointed as Head Architectural Advisor with retrospective effect from 12 October 1842. On 12 July 1845 he died and was laid to rest in the Bornstedt Cemetery in Sello-Teil (near the Krongut Bornstedt).

Works

Built in co-operation with Schinkel

  • 1821, castle and church on the grounds of Graf Potocki at Kraków

Remaining

  • 1833, house in Sanssouci Park near the Roman Baths
  • 1834/35, Traveller's and Fisherman's House in Uetz (in Uetz-Paaren, near Potsdam)
  • 1837/38, Schierstedt Farmhouse in Gräben-Dahlen
  • 1838/39, gardener and machine house, the Devil's Bridge, Orangery and greenhouse in
    Berlin-Wannsee
    )
  • 1840, Stibadium in Park Glienicke (in Berlin-Wannsee)
  • 1840/41, Entenfang Establishment at the
    Geltow, Schwielowsee
    ) as well as the rebuilding of the side wings of the Sanssouci Palace
  • 1840-42, Rebuilding of Glienicke Palace (in Berlin-Wannsee)
  • 1841, Prince's Underforester's House at Moorlake (in Berlin-Wannsee); first blueprints for the
    Church of Peace
    (completed in 1844)
  • 1841/42, Stag Gate in Glienicke Park; first, second and third Forester's Establishment and the Gamekeeper's House in the Safari Park; Blueprints for the dome of the
    Church of St. Nikolai
    (completed in 1850)
  • 1841-43, Conversion of the Royal Civil Cabinet House (in Potsdam, Allee nach Sanssouci 6); Head gardener's House in Sello (now the Villa Kache in Potsdam, Maulbeerallee 2); Steam engine house for Sanssouci (in Potsdam, Breite Str. 28); steam flour mills of the former Preußische Seehandlung (in Potsdam, Zeppelinstr. 136)
  • 1841-44, Church of the Redeemer and Roman Bank in Potsdam-Sacrow (Krampnitzer Str. 9); Fountains and minor architectural details in Sanssouci Park; Atrium and Pergola in the Paradise Garden (completed in 1848); Mulberry Alley, now part of the Botanical Gardens at the University of Potsdam
Körnermagazin in Potsdam

No longer remaining

References

  • Architekturführer Ludwig Persius - Architekt des Königs, Baukunst unter Friedrich Wilhelm IV., Hrsg.: Stiftung Preußische Schlösser und Gärten Berlin-Brandenburg, Potsdam 2003

External links