Adolf Feyerabend

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Adolf Feyerabend (born May 12, 1842 in Heilbronn ; † March 14, 1891 in Konstanz ) was a German manufacturer and politician . From 1884 to 1889 he was a member of the Chamber of Deputies of the Württemberg Land estates .

Life

The Feyerabend family was one of the oldest families in Württemberg and had played an important role in the imperial city of Heilbronn. The mayors of the imperial city David Jakob Feyerabend , Georg Heinrich Feyerabend and Johann David Feyerabend came from her .

Adolf Feyerabend was the son of the Heilbronn lawyer David Heinrich Feyerabend (1812–1890). He had an older sister, Anna Feyerabend (1839-1919), who married Friedrich von Rauch in 1866 , son of the paper manufacturer Moriz von Rauch . On March 16, 1869, Adolf Feyerabend married Luise von Rauch (1842–1916), a daughter of Moriz von Rauch's brother Adolf von Rauch , and joined the management of the Rauch paper factory. At first he lived with his wife in the garden house of the Villa Rauch , which they inherited in 1882 after the death of Adolf von Rauch. The sons Stefan († 1894) and Georg († 1922) emerged from the marriage.

When the Aktiengesellschaft Salzwerk Heilbronn was set up on November 16, 1883, Adolf Feyerabend was a member of the board of directors together with Theodor Lichtenberger (1844–1909). He was also a member of the board of directors of the Heilbronner housing association, which his father-in-law co-founded.

After Karl Wüst's death, a replacement election was required in the Heilbronn Stadt constituency on March 12, 1884, which Feyerabend won. In the Chamber of Deputies, he was a member of the Economic Commission. In the next election in 1889, Feyerabend refused to run again, Georg Härle (VP) won against Gustav Kittler (SPD).

Adolf Feyerabend died on March 14, 1891 in Konstanz. He was buried on March 17, 1891 in Heilbronn.

Honors

There has been a Feyerabendstrasse in Heilbronn since 1900.

Individual evidence

  1. Raberg (see literature) names Heinrich David Feyerabend (1804–1864).
  2. ^ Frank Raberg : Biographical handbook of the Württemberg state parliament members 1815-1933 . On behalf of the Commission for Historical Regional Studies in Baden-Württemberg. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 2001, ISBN 3-17-016604-2 , p. 695 .
  3. Heilbronn City Archives , Contemporary History Collection, signature ZS-10092, entry on Adolf Feyerabend in the HEUSS database (accessed on January 2, 2013)
  4. Heilbronn City Archives, Contemporary History Collection, signature 14810, entry on Theodor Lichtenberger in the HEUSS database (accessed on January 2, 2013)
  5. ^ Friedrich Dürr : Chronicle of the city of Heilbronn . Volume I: 741-1895. Heilbronn City Archives, Heilbronn 1986, DNB  870345044 , p. 449 ( Publications of the Archives of the City of Heilbronn . Volume 27. - Unchanged reprint of the 2nd edition from 1926).
  6. Heilbronn City Archives, contemporary history collection, signature ZS-4430, entry on Heilbronner Wohnungsverein AG in the HEUSS database (accessed on January 2, 2013)
  7. ^ Friedrich Dürr : Chronicle of the city of Heilbronn . Volume I: 741-1895. Heilbronn City Archives, Heilbronn 1986, DNB  870345044 , p. 467 ( Publications of the Archives of the City of Heilbronn . Volume 27. - Unchanged reprint of the 2nd edition from 1926).

literature

  • Frank Raberg : Biographical handbook of the Württemberg state parliament members 1815-1933 . On behalf of the Commission for Historical Regional Studies in Baden-Württemberg. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 2001, ISBN 3-17-016604-2 , p. 204 .
  • Gerhard Schwinghammer and Reiner Makowski: The Heilbronner street names . Edited by the city of Heilbronn. 1st edition. Silberburg-Verlag , Tübingen 2005, ISBN 3-87407-677-6 , pp. 65-66, 151