Academic Aviation
Academic pilots are student associations that came into being after the First World War and largely disappeared in the early days of National Socialism .
history
When Germany and Austria were banned from maintaining air forces after the Treaty of Versailles and the Peace Treaty of Saint-Germain , aviation was established at many universities in the interwar period . They should spread aviation skills among the students. The aviators wore color and were usually exposed .
The Academic Fliegerring was founded on October 28, 1924 as a corporation of the aviation associations . The ring of academic pilots founded in 1923 by the Daedalia Breslau and Daedalia Leipzig pilots was merged into it. The Academic Fliegerzeitung was published as the association's journal . The association was dissolved in 1935. The only aviation that still exists today is the Wieland-Staufen Academic Aviation in Graz .
Membership development
Members of the Academic Aviation Ring were:
- Lilienthal Berlin
- Daedalia Wroclaw
- Richthofen Darmstadt
- Wieland Graz
- Marcho-Tuiskonia Hall
- Palaio-Markomannia Hall
- Boelcke Heidelberg
- Rossiten Königsberg (later renamed: Prussia Königsberg)
- Daedalia Leipzig
- Icarus Leipzig
See also
literature
- Ernst Hans Eberhard : Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig 1924/25, p. 226.
- Paulgerhard Gladen : History of the student corporation associations. Volume 2, Würzburg 1985, pp. 44-45.
- Bernhard Grün, Christoph Vogel: The Fuxenstunde . Manual of Corporation Studentism. Bad Buchau 2014, pp. 195–196, ISBN 978-3-925171-92-5 .
- Harald Lönnecker : Rowing, sailing, flying - activities of academic connections and associations between sport and politics approx. 1885–1945 . In: Thomas Alkemeyer, Wolfgang Buss, Lorenz Peiffer, Bero Rigauer, (Eds.): Sport in Nordwestdeutschland . Göttingen 2009, pp. 7-36.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Peter Krause : O old lad glory. The students and their customs. 5th edition. Graz, Vienna, Cologne 1997, p. 175
- ↑ Peter Krause: O old lad glory. The students and their customs. 5th edition. Graz, Vienna, Cologne 1997, p. 178
- ↑ In 1970 the Prussian flag was handed over to AF Wieland-Staufen Graz.