Albert Boas

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Albert Boas (born March 20, 1878 in Paris , † November 24, 1950 in Erfurt ) was a German judge at the higher court.

Life

Boas attended the Royal Wilhelms-Gymnasium in Berlin. After graduating from high school (Easter 1886), he studied law at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin and the Kaiser-Wilhelms-Universität Strasbourg . On October 29, 1897 he became active in the Corps Palaio-Alsatia . After he had passed the First State Examination in Berlin at the end of the 1900 summer semester, he was a trainee lawyer in the Prussian Justice Administration in Berlin.

From October 1, 1900 he served as a one-year volunteer with the 2nd Upper Alsatian Field Artillery Regiment No. 51 ( 51st Reserve Division ). After the second state examination in law on June 8, 1905, he was a court assessor in Berlin. On April 1, 1908, he became a district judge in Rixdorf and in 1913 a district judge at the Berlin I district court . As a reserve officer he came to the Eastern Front (World War I) . He fought in the Battle of Tannenberg , the Battle of the Vistula , the Battle of Łódź , the Battle of the Carpathians , in the Pripjet Marshes and many other battles.

Since 1919 district judge, he was on February 24, 1921 chamber judge. After the death of Walther Kausch he led the group of the Berlin Altelsässer. He was removed from office under the Law to Restore the Civil Service . Out of consideration for his corps, he put down his volume on September 30, 1935 under the pressure of the Aryan paragraph . After the Second World War he was a judge at the Erfurt Regional Court . He died at the age of 72. Never considered to have resigned, he did not see the reconstitution of his corps in Frankfurt am Main (1953).

He was married since December 23, 1920 to Elisabeth Schott , a daughter of the actor and writer Richard Schott (1860-1921). The marriage remained childless.

Honors

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Personal chronicle no. 90 of the Corps Palaio-Alsatia.
  2. Kösener Corpslisten 1930, 31/74.
  3. Boas is not listed in the 1960 Kösener corps lists.
  4. Elisabeth Boas died on November 26, 1954.
  5. Richard Schott
  6. ^ Richard Schott in the DNB
  7. German Judges Association: Memorial plaque - list of names. (PDF) Retrieved December 9, 2019 .