August Hullmann

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Heinrich Gerhard August Hullmann (born August 18, 1826 in Elsfleth ; † November 21, 1887 in Leipzig ) was an imperial judge and member of the German Reichstag .

Live and act

The son of the dike conductor Johann Hullmann (1792–), attended high school in Jever . Hullmann studied law at the University of Jena from 1846 . During his studies in Jena in 1846 he became a member of the association in the castle cellar . In 1848 Hullmann took part in the Wartburg Festival on June 12, 1848. In 1848 he was a board member of the democratic society in Jena. On August 14, 1848, Hullmann was arrested when, as a member of the deputation, he tried to extort a student who had been arrested during rioting the previous day under threat of violence. On August 26, 1848, Hullmann was released from custody in Weimar . Together with Friedrich Wilhelm Eschen, he headed the editorial team of the Thuringian People's Tribune from October 14 to December 23, 1848, which he took over from the arrested Wilhelm Adolph Lafaurie (1816–1875) and Carl Gustav Rothe (1823–1910). On February 15, 1849, Hullmann offered Karl Marx a job in the Neue Rheinische Zeitung . On February 22nd, an article by Hullmann was published there about the trial against Lafaurie and Rothe. He was only able to complete his studies with a grant from the Grand Duke of Oldenburg, which his father was unable to work due to a mental illness and was therefore heavily in debt. In 1850 he went to the judiciary. After preparatory service as an official auditor in Tossens and as a district court secretary in Neuchâtel , he passed the second state law examination in October 1853. In 1855 he was appointed regional court assessor in Oldenburg . In 1858 he was transferred to the higher court in Varel . In 1861 he was appointed assistant judge at the Court of Appeal in Oldenburg and the next year to the higher court there. In 1865 he became a council member at the Obergericht Oldenburg. In 1868 he was appointed assistant judge at the Higher Appeal Court in Oldenburg . From 1873 he was chief appeal councilor. In 1878 he was appointed to the Imperial Higher Trade Judge in Leipzig, and in 1879 to the second civil senate of the Imperial Court.

In 1857 and 1863 he was a member of the Oldenburg State Parliament , from 1869 to 1872 as its president . In 1867 he applied in vain for a seat in the Reichstag. In 1874 he was elected to the German Reichstag for the constituency of Oldenburg 1 (Oldenburg, Eutin, Birkenfeld) and the National Liberal Party . Together with Hermann Becker , who also came from Oldenburg, he was on the legislative commission for the Reich Justice Act of 1877 and wrote one of the first comments on the new bankruptcy rules.

Fonts

  • The reform of the basic law of succession in the Duchy of Oldenburg, Oldenburg 1870 Digitalisat of MPIeR .
  • The Concursordnung for the German Empire, 1879.
  • The Oldenburg Law, regarding the annulment of the appellate instance, The Courtroom, Volume 21 (1869), p. 161 .

literature

  • Hermann Kalkoff (Ed.): National Liberal Parliamentarians 1867–1917 of the Reichstag and the individual state parliaments. Publication distribution center of the National Liberal Party of Germany, Berlin 1917.
  • Hans Friedl: Hullmann, Heinrich Gerhard August. In: Hans Friedl u. a. (Ed.): Biographical manual for the history of the state of Oldenburg . Edited on behalf of the Oldenburg landscape. Isensee, Oldenburg 1992, ISBN 3-89442-135-5 , p. 337 ( PDF ).
  • Helge Dvorak: Biographical Lexicon of the German Burschenschaft. Volume I: Politicians. Sub-Volume 2: F-H. Winter, Heidelberg 1999, ISBN 3-8253-0809-X , pp. 412-413.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Address of 170 students from the Wartburg, Frankfurt am Main 1848, p. 6
  2. Björn Boris Thomann: The fraternities in Jena, Bonn and Breslau and their role in the revolution of 1848/49, master's thesis University of Trier 2004, p. 40f. ( PDF on www.burschenschaft.de ).
  3. Gerhard Juckenburg, Jena progress students (1840–1849). The struggle of Jena progress students for a democratic design of Germany, Jena 1972, p. 95
  4. Marx-Engels-Gesamtausgabe , Section III Volume 3: January 1849 to December 1850, 1981, p. 1017.
  5. ^ Fritz Specht, Paul Schwabe: The Reichstag elections from 1867 to 1903. Statistics of the Reichstag elections together with the programs of the parties and a list of the elected representatives. 2nd Edition. Carl Heymann Verlag, Berlin 1904, p. 276.