Charles Nalder Baeyertz

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Charles_Nalder_Baeyertz an entity of type: Thing

Charles Nalder Baeyertz (15 December 1866 – 5 June 1943) was a New Zealand teacher, journalist, editor, publisher and music critic. He was born on 15 December 1866 in Richmond, Victoria, to bank manager Charles Baeyertz and his wife Emilia Baeyertz. When his father died in a shooting accident, Baeyertz was put into boarding school and his mother became a famous evangelist. He graduated with a licentiate from the London College of Music and moved to New Zealand with his wife Bella. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Charles Nalder Baeyertz
rdf:langString Charles Nalder Baeyertz
rdf:langString Charles Nalder Baeyertz
xsd:date 1943-06-05
xsd:date 1866-12-15
xsd:integer 50273854
xsd:integer 1120833661
rdf:langString right
rdf:langString Black and white portrait of a man
xsd:date 1866-12-15
rdf:langString Baeyertz in approximately 1918
xsd:date 1943-06-05
rdf:langString The Triad magazine
rdf:langString Australian
rdf:langString [The] lasting impact of Emilia's intensity, and the extent to which Charles followed her example, are demonstrated by the 'Apostolic fire' which imbued his cultural mission to New Zealand and promoted him to found his critical magazine, The Triad. Strains of his mother's evangelism resound through its pages, not only in his exacting musical and literary reviews, but also in his many pronouncements on the moral dangers of 'a prevalence of bad English' and his dire warnings on the evils of faulty diction
rdf:langString Joanna Woods in Facing the Music: Charles Baeyertz
<perCent> 30.0
rdf:langString Charles Nalder Baeyertz (15 December 1866 – 5 June 1943) was a New Zealand teacher, journalist, editor, publisher and music critic. He was born on 15 December 1866 in Richmond, Victoria, to bank manager Charles Baeyertz and his wife Emilia Baeyertz. When his father died in a shooting accident, Baeyertz was put into boarding school and his mother became a famous evangelist. He graduated with a licentiate from the London College of Music and moved to New Zealand with his wife Bella. Whilst in New Zealand, Baeyertz founded a journal, The Triad, which he edited and co-owned for 32 years. The journal became the most successful literary magazine of the time, supposedly found "in every club, hotel and reading-room throughout Australasia".
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6791
xsd:gYear 1866
xsd:gYear 1943

data from the linked data cloud