Aloisia Eberle

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Aloisia Eberle (born April 22, 1889 in Scharfenstein / Saxony ; date of death unknown ) was a German politician ( BVP ). During the Weimar Republic she was a member of the Bavarian State Parliament from 1919 to 1924 and previously of the Provisional National Council.

Profession and Politics

Aloisia Eberle was a weaver. In Kottern near Kempten she became secretary of the Catholic workers 'association and in 1916 full-time secretary - as successor to Therese Studer - of the Association of South German Catholic Workers' Associations in Munich .

In November 1918 Eberle was sent to the Provisional National Council of Bavaria by the local cartel of the Christian trade unions and the district association of Catholic workers 'and workers' associations in Munich .

In the Bavarian state elections on January 12, 1919, Eberle ran successfully for the Bavarian People's Party (BVP) in the district of Munich X, Kempten . She had signed the program of this party of November 15, 1918. In the next election in 1920 she was confirmed in her mandate in the constituency Augsburg II and III . From 1919 to 1924 Eberle was a member of several committees of the state parliament.

  • Member of committees in the first electoral term 1919–1920:
    • III. Election Review Committee (from March 18, 1919)
    • XII. People's Court Committee (from July 3, 1919)
    • Committee for the period of adjournment of the state parliament according to §30 of the constitutional document (deputy member from August 16, 1919)
  • Member of committees of the second electoral term 1920–1924:
    • Election Examination Committee (from July 16, 1920)
    • Committee for tasks of an economic nature (from December 18, 1922)

Aloisia Eberle was Catholic. After her marriage in 1926, she retired from political life and from association work. The date of her death is unknown.

literature

  • Dorit-Maria Krenn : The Christian workers' movement in Bavaria from the First World War to 1933 . Mainz 1991.
  • Marita A. Panzer, Elisabeth Plössl: Bavarias daughters. Portraits of women from five centuries . Regensburg 1997.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Krenn, p. 244.