554
HEILBUTH—HELMHOLTZ.
Frankfort, 18 18; "Hans Burgh- I maier's Tumierbuch nach Maximi- | lian's I Anordnimg," Frankfort, 1853 ; " Die Burg Tannenberg und ihr© Ausgrabungen," Frankfort, 1850; "Eisenwerke oder Oma- mente der Schmiedekunst des Mittelalters und der Benaissance," Frankfort, 1864, 2nd edit., 1869; "Entwftrfe deutscher Meister fttr Prachtrtlstungen der Kdnige von Frankreich," Munich, 1865 ; " Die Kunstkammer des FOrsten Karl Anton von Hohenzollem," parts 1—6, Frankfort, 1866; "Oma- mente alter Meister," Munich, 1871. He also compiled an elaborate " Book of the Genealogy of the Baronial Family of Fechenbach- Lausenbach," which has not been published. This beautifully illus- trated work is preserved in the family archives at Lausenbach.
HEILBUTH, Ferdinand, a German painter, resident at Paris, is a native of Hamburg. At the commencement of his artiisitic career he excelled in painting costumes ; but after completing his training in the French capital, and in Borne, where he pursued his studies for several years, he turned his atten- tion with marked success to the pictorial representation of histori- cal events and incidents of social life. Among his principal works are : — " Paiestrina's Music Re- hearsal," 1857 ; " The Auto-da-F^,". 1861 ; " Tasso with both the Leo- noras;" and "Cardinals taking Exercise on the Pincian Hill," 1862 (this and the three preceding pictures are in the possession of private individuals at Hamburg) ; " The Pawnshop," 1861, for which a prize was awarded, and which is now in the Luxembourg Museum, at Paris; "The Absolution in St. Peter's at Rome," "The Cardinal's Ante-chamber," " The Confession " (exhibited at the Royal Academy, London, in 1871). "Spring," "On the Banks of the Seine," and " The Harvest of Love" (exhibited at Berlin in 1871), and "The Banks
of the Thames" (exhibited at Glas- gow in 1878). Highly prized also are his portraits in the style of Titian and Rembrandt. He was made a Knight of the Legion of Honour in 1861. When the war broke out between Prussia and France Heilbuth, who had French proclivites, withdrew to England, from whence he returned to Paris in 1872. In July, 1879, he received letters of grand naturalization.
HELLMUTH, The Right Bbv. Isaac, D.D., D.C.L., was born in Poland, and is of Jewish ex- traction. Having been converted to Christianity and ordained in the Anglican Church, he settled in Can^a about 1856. By his energy Huron College was esta- blished for the education of the future clergy of the diocese. A few months afterwards the London Collegiate School, since named Hellmuth College, was erected. Meanwhile Dr. Hellmuth had been appointed successively Archdeacon and Dean of Huron. Finding that the boys* college (Hellmuth Col- lege) was a perfect success, he pro- ceeded to establish a similar coUe^ for ladies, which was opened m 1869. On Aug. 24, 1870, he was consecrated Coadjutor - BishoJ* of Huron, with the title of Bishop of Norfolk, in the Cathedral of St. Paul, London, Canada West. In 1871, on the demise of Bishop Cronyn, Dr. Hellmuth succeeded him in the see of Huron. He re- signed that see and came to Eng- land in 1883, on being appointed assistant bishop in the diocese of Ripon.
HELMHOLTZ, Hermann Louis, a distinguished German physiolo- gist and natural philosopher, is the son of a professor in the gymnasium of Potsdam, in which town he was bom, Aug. 31, 1821. After study- ing medicine in the Military In- stitute at Berlin, and being attached for a time to the staff of one <^ the public hospitals there, he returned to his native town as an army