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HEINEFETTER, JOHANN, born in Mentz in 1815. Battle and landscape painter, pupil in Munich of D. Monten; travelled in France, Italy, Switzerland, and the Tyrol. Works: Tavern Scenes and Skirmishes; Frescos in Trinkhalle, Baden-Baden; Pictures in the Kursaal, Cemetery Chapel, and several Villas, ib.


HEINEL, JOHANN PHILIPP, born at Baireuth, Oct. 21, 1800, died in Munich, July 29, 1843. Genre and landscape painter, pupil of the Munich Academy in 1820-26 under Robert von Langer; painted at first historical subjects, then portraits, and finally genre scenes in the Bavarian Alps and landscapes. Works: Achilles (1823); Ossian and Malvina (1826); Group of Bavarian Peasant Girls (1829); Landscape after Storm (1830); Tyrolese Landscape (1832); Priest's Visit, On Lake Starnberg, The Watzmann, Scene on a Tyrolese Alp, Poacher watching for his Persecutors, Height with Chamois (1834); Tyrolese Family, Young Tyrolese with his Sweetheart, The Bride, Family Scene, Girl playing Zither, Rocky Landscape, Bavarian Mountain Lake, Glacier (1835); Bagpiper (1836); Mountain Landscape with Lake, Tyrolese playing to a Girl, Two Bavarian Peasant Girls (1837); Adoration of the Shepherds (1838); Shepherdess (1840).—Allgem. d. Biogr., xi. 366; Andresen, i. 164; Cotta's Kunstbl. (1836), 87.


HEINLEIN, HEINRICH, born at Weilburg, Nassau, Dec. 3, 1803, died in Munich, Dec. 8, 1885. Landscape painter, first instructed by his mother, a painter in pastel, studied architecture at Munich and drawing at Mannheim Academy; visited Switzerland and Italy, and settled in Munich in 1829, and in 1830 had obtained reputation as one of the best German landscape painters. Honorary member of the Munich (1846) and Vienna Academies; Order of St. Michael, 1852. Works: Ravine; Poachers attacked in their Camp (1823); Mountain Lake in a Storm; Alpine Valley with a Funeral (1825); Waldesstille; Klösterl am Wachensee; Upper Gosau Lake; Windauthal; Wilderness in Salvaretta Mountains; Engadine Valley; Ruins of Juvarium; View in South Tyrol, New Pinakothek, Munich; Landscape with Castle Tyrol, Carlsruhe Gallery; View in Grisons (1839), Leipsic Museum; others in Stuttgart, Hanover, Brunswick, Mentz, and Prague Galleries.—Dioskuren (1860), 193, 204; Kunst-Chronik, xxi. 219; Die Kunst für Alle, i. 100; Müller, 247; Raczynski, ii. 338, 402.


HEINRICH OF DUDERSTADT, monk, German school, early part of 15th century. His large altarpiece (1424), now in the library at Göttingen, representing the Twelve Apostles, the Crucifixion, and eighteen small Passion-Scenes, show that he was influenced by the school of Cologne.—Kugler, Gesch. d. Malerei, i. 257; Schnaase, vi. 479.


HEINTSCH, JOHANN GEORG, born in Silesia about middle of 17th century, died in Prague in 1713. German school; Lived in Prague from 1678, married in 1704, and took the freedom of the city. Quirin Jahn, his contemporary, says that he belonged to a monastic fraternity. In his later works he was influenced by Carl Screta, who died (1674) a few years before Heintsch's arrival in Prague. Works in Prague: Altarpiece, Jesuit Church; Madonna (1696), Karlshofer Stiftskirche; Altarpiece, St. Henry's; Side Altarpieces, St. Catherine's; Holy Family, Minorites Church; Transportation of St. Wenceslaus' Body to Prague in 940 (1692), Teinkirche; several pictures in chapels and cloister of the Kreuzherren-Stift; Christ in the Temple, St. Joseph, St. Clemens adoring the Virgin, St. Ignatius and Trinity, Martyrdom of St. Vitus, St. Francis Xavier baptizing Moorish Prince, Four Elements, Bust Portrait of Praying Woman, St. Norbert, St. Aloysius, Flight to Egypt.—Allgem. d. Biogr., xi. 660; Kugler (Crowe), 528.


HEINZ, JOSEPH, the elder, born in Berne in 1565, died in Prague, Oct. 15, 1609. German school; history painter, called by Van Mander a pupil of Johann van Achen, which seems doubtful, as the latter went to Venice in 1574. Heinz went to