Alwin Saenger

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Alwin Saenger

Alwin Saenger (born July 12, 1881 in Eutin , † February 18, 1929 in Munich ) was a German lawyer and politician ( SPD ).

Live and act

Saenger studied law in Kiel and Munich. From 1910 he practiced as a lawyer in Munich. In addition, Saenger belonged to the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) at a young age . As an author for newspapers of the SPD-related press - such as the Glocke or the Swabian Tagwacht - Saenger repeatedly turned against the militarism of imperial Germany. As a journalist, he was also in Munich on the grounds of the 1909 forward part of the newspaper of the Workers' Educational Association.

After the First World War , Saenger was assigned to the military department of the Foreign Office in November 1918 . In 1919 he sat briefly in the Weimar National Assembly . From 1919 to 1924 he was a member of the Bavarian State Parliament for the SPD . From 1919 to 1920 he also served briefly as State Secretary in the Bavarian Ministry of Culture (education). After that he sat for almost five years in the Berlin Reichstag, first on the Reich election proposal, then for constituency 24 (Upper Bavaria-Swabia). Saenger died in February 1929 as a result of an operation.

Fonts

  • The German Government's Guilt for the War . 1918.
  • War Extender . Berlin 1918.
  • The politics of the Bavarian social democracy. Speech . 1919.
  • Reaction and the working class: Speech by MP Alwin Saenger at a meeting of the shop stewards of the Social Democratic Association in Munich on Tuesday, January 4, 1921 . 1921.
  • Georg Heinrich von Vollmar on Veltheim . 1922.
  • Reichstag deputy Alwin Saenger against Count von Westarp . 1926.
  • with Leopold Samolewitz and Rudolf Wasserman : Law on the comparison to avert bankruptcy . 1927.

literature

  • Heinrich Cunow: Saenger, Alwin . In: German Biographical Yearbook. Volume IV, 1929, pp. 276-289.
  • Alwin singer . In: Franz Osterroth : Biographical Lexicon of Socialism . Vol. 1, Hannover 1960, p. 343.
  • Martin Schumacher (Hrsg.): MdR The Reichstag members of the Weimar Republic in the time of National Socialism. Political persecution, emigration and expatriation, 1933–1945. A biographical documentation . 3rd, considerably expanded and revised edition. Droste, Düsseldorf 1994, ISBN 3-7700-5183-1 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hermann Heidegger: The German Social Democracy and the National State 1870-1920 . 1956, p. 278.
  2. ^ SPD: Social Democratic Party Correspondence . 1929, p. 128.