Fraternity of the Bubenreuther
The fraternity of the Bubenreuther is a colored , facultative striking student union of the " Red Association " (RV) at the Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg in the new German fraternity . It is one of the largest and oldest fraternities in Germany.
Color and motto
The fraternity of the Bubenreuther wears a ( color ) black and red ribbon with golden percussion . The Bubenreuthers wear a red hat with an oak wreath (also called wreath hat) with the black and red ribbon . The colors black-red-gold correspond to the colors of the original fraternity .
The motto of the Bubenreuth fraternity "God - Freedom - Honor - Fatherland" can also be found in the circle . In addition, the principle of morality, the principle of science and the love of the country are of great importance. The moral principle describes human maturity in thinking, acting and dealing with one another, while the scientific principle aims at an open attitude towards other approaches and an academic basic knowledge. On the subject of patriotism, the fraternity consciously emphasizes Germany's responsibility as a partner in the community of European nations, in a peaceful and united Europe. Right-national aspirations are rejected. Instead, what must be defended is Germany's free and democratic basic order, the right to self-determination and freedom of expression, and the requirement to respect one's neighbor.
history
The fraternity of the Bubenreuther was founded on December 1, 1817 as a direct consequence of the Wartburg Festival in Erlangen as the “General Erlanger fraternity”. She also carried the commonly used name Arminia . With the assassination attempt by the theology student Karl Ludwig Sand , a founding member of the Erlangen fraternity, on August von Kotzebue and the Karlsbad resolutions enforced by Metternich , the flourishing life of the fraternity in Erlangen was initially interrupted. In order to avoid the reprisals of the persecution of demagogues, the Armines met in the then still hidden village of Bubenreuth , which was soon to become the eponym for the fraternity and the origin of the “Bubenreuther Eigenart”.
In the dispute between the Arminists and Germanists that broke out at that time among the fraternities, the Arminist principle prevailed under the influence of Karl von Hase in Erlangen. The Hambach Festival (1832) and the Frankfurt Wachensturm (1833) were pretexts for a renewed “demagogue persecution”. Therefore, the Arminia officially dissolved on May 9, 1833 in Bubenreuth. Unofficially, however, federal life was continued under the name "Bubenruthia" - derived from the place name Bubenreuth.
On the 100th anniversary of the University of Erlangen in 1843, the fraternity was allowed to appear in public for the first time. She took part in the pageant under a neutral flag. In the following years it was especially thanks to Hans von Raumer that the coexistence of the former members and the active members was given a firm shape again. He was also - along with six other Bubenreuthers - a member of the National Assembly in the Paulskirche in Frankfurt (1848).
In the second half of the 19th century cartels were formed within the German fraternities at the various German universities. The Bubenreuthers and the Arminia fraternity also founded the “Red Cartel”, the forerunner of the “ Red Association ” (RV), named after the color of the hats in the castle cellar in Jena in 1860 . The Bubenreuthers belong to the RV to this day. The Bubenreuthers were always reserved about the umbrella association of all fraternities, founded in 1881 and renamed the “ German fraternity ” in 1902 . Admission and exit took place alternately.
During the First World War in 1914, only a few members stayed in Erlangen and tried to carry on with federal life. At the end of the war, the Bubenruthia mourned 104 dead members, including the poet Walter Flex .
Meanwhile again a member of the "Deutsche Burschenschaft" (DB), the spokesman for the Bubenreuth refused in 1934 to deliver the Aryan questionnaires to them, which resulted in renewed exclusion from the umbrella organization. After the Aryan paragraph had been enforced by the National Socialist German Student Union , which the DB also joined in 1935, the Erlangen corporates were given the choice on January 30, 1936 in the Redoutensaal to discard the tape or to leave the hall. The Bubenreuthers opted for the latter. On the same evening, the Bubenreuther and eight other Erlangen connections decided to dissolve them. Unofficially, however, the federal life was continued until the National Socialists forced the conversion of student connections into so-called comradeships at all German universities . A “Walter Flex Comradeship” established itself in the Bubenreuth house, which at least through its naming allowed an appeal to the fraternity. The members of this comradeship also visited Bubenreuth from time to time in order to keep in touch with them.
In 1941 the Bubenreuth house was confiscated for war purposes and used as a military hospital by the Wehrmacht. 79 Bubenreuthers were killed in the Second World War.
After the end of the war in 1945, numerous connections were initially forbidden by the victorious powers, including the Bubenreuth fraternity, whose house was confiscated and used as a clinic and administrative center.
On their way to a new beginning after 1945, the Bubenreuthers looked for positive points of contact in their eventful past after the period of imperialism of the National Socialists and found them in the actively lived, democratic, liberal and Christian tradition of the early fraternity. In 1946, therefore, a community of young students, including the sons of Bubenreuthern, came into being, which initially adopted the name “Sodalitas”, but increasingly oriented itself towards the principles of the fraternity and made contact with the Philistine Association . The Sodalitas took on the colors of the fraternity, met regularly in Bubenreuth and officially adopted the name "Fraternity of Bubenreuth" again in 1950 after being recognized by the Philistine Association. In 1957, after long negotiations, the Erlangen house was returned to the Bubenreuthers.
The active fraternity, which had reintroduced academic fencing after its re-emergence, replaced it after long discussions in 1968 with sport fencing. As a result, there were repeated disputes with DB in the following years, which in 1988 led to the renewed exclusion of the Bubenreuthers from the umbrella organization.
The “principle of chastity ”, which forbade premarital intercourse and originated from the early days of the union, caused conflicts and a number of withdrawals from the fraternity . In 1968 it was repealed and replaced by a “principle of morality ”. Heinz Roth, the head of the assembly at the time, commented: "The boys should carefully discard traditions and forms that no longer seem appropriate to them if the spirit is preserved!" In 1995, citing this principle of morality, a covenant brother became a brother because of his homosexuality locked out.
The Bubenreuther Colloquium has been a permanent public event of the Bubenreuther fraternity since 1984. It usually takes place at the end of January / beginning of February at the Bubenreuther Haus in Erlangen. Well-known speakers and experts discuss questions of the political situation in Germany and Europe with students and interested parties.
In 1993 the fraternity published its "Bubenreuther Manifest", which in 2017 resulted in the "Bubenreuther Declaration", in which the fraternity of Bubenreuther a. a. distanced from any extremism, nationalistic exaggeration, völkisch thinking and xenophobia: “We want to orientate ourselves on the principles of Christianity, but also respect other religions and ideological orientations if they are compatible with the basic values of the Basic Law of the Federal Republic of Germany. We train our members to be willing to talk, to be able to compromise and to be tolerant. As a cross-generational educational community, we oppose the rampant, often unrestricted individualism and strive for a responsible way of life based on community. We want to prepare [...] for participation in shaping cultural, social and political life. ”As a community and association, she wants to live the fraternity's basic values in a contemporary form, with special responsibility for the community and society, by promoting the civic interest, value-oriented behavior and motivation of the students.
With the celebration of the 200th foundation festival of the fraternity in 2017, the fraternity of the Bubenreuther presented itself again in the tradition of the original fraternities, which 200 years ago stood for liberal, new intellectual currents: for the ideas of freedom and equality of the French Revolution, the idealism of the German Romanticism, the morality of an emerging value-oriented bourgeoisie and the ideal of a united fatherland - today a united, peaceful Europe - in a world in which human rights are respected and lived.
Red Association and New German Burschenschaft
The " Red Association " (RV) is a Germany-wide association of liberal, arminist fraternities, which got its name from their red caps. The Bubenreuther fraternity has been a founding member of the RV since 1897.
In 1996, with significant involvement of the Bubenreuthers, as a countermovement to the “old” DB, the “New German Burschenschaft” ( New DB ) was founded, which advocates contemporary commitment to the community without nationalistic exaggeration. For some fraternities, the impetus for founding the New DB was also the issue of the compulsory striking of sharp scales , the admission of conscientious objectors and the membership requirements for admission to the DB.
The members of the Neue DB are facultative fraternities that continue academic fencing in the tradition of the original fraternity of 1815, i.e. H. It is up to each fraternity to decide whether to set a scale length. With this reservation and compromise, the Bubenreuthers are again today for student fencing.
Bubenreuth house
The Bubenreuth fraternity decided in 1889 to build the house in order to offer its active members their own home. The architect of the house was Theodor Eyrich . The center of the house is the magnificent ballroom with larger-than-life murals from student life in Erlangen, which were painted by Otto Bollhagen and are the largest Art Nouveau paintings in Europe. In 1933 the house was renovated and expanded. During the Second World War, the Wehrmacht confiscated the house and used it as a hospital until it was finally returned to the Bubenreuth fraternity in 1957.
In 2014, the fraternity was able to use the 125th anniversary of the Bubenreutherhaus at Ostliche Stadtmauerstraße 32 in Erlangen to celebrate a new student dormitory for Erlangen with the move into the modern new building in the rear building of the house.
Mörsbergei
The real home of the Bubenreuth fraternity, the Mörsbergei, is in Bubenreuth. Already in the 18th century the property and the inn was a popular meeting place for Erlangen students. The fraternity's pubs take place in the inn, and the Bubenreuther Kirchweih is held on the property. The name Mörsbergei is derived from the name of the last owner, Johann Friedrich (called "Jean") Mörsberger. He sold the property to the fraternity in 1914.
Well-known Bubenreuther
Surname | Life dates | job | image |
Hans Achelis | 1865-1937 | Protestant theologian and professor for church history and Christian archeology in Bonn and Leipzig | |
Ludwig Aegidi | 1825-1901 | Professor of constitutional law in Göttingen and Erlangen, member of the Prussian Ministerial Council | |
Henry Albers | 1904-1987 | Chemist and professor | |
Friedrich Wilhelm Albrecht | 1861-1943 | Pastor and politician, member of the Bavarian Chamber of Deputies | |
Fischel Arnhem | 1812-1864 | Politician and lawyer | |
Wilhelm of Ammon | 1903-1992 | German lawyer and National Socialist | |
Hans Freiherr von und zu Aufseß | 1801-1872 | Founder of the Germanic Museum in Nuremberg |
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Otto Freiherr von und zu Aufseß | 1825-1903 | Politician | |
Karl Heinrich Bauer | 1890-1988 | Physician, cancer researcher and first rector of Heidelberg University after the Second World War | |
Otto Becker | 1828-1890 | Ophthalmologist | |
Hermann Friedrich Beckh | 1806-1886 | Lawyer and politician; Founder of the Nuremberg rescue center | |
Hermann Beckh | 1832-1908 | Lawyer and member of the Reichstag | |
Theodor Berkmann | 1802-1870 | Theologian, politician and member of the Frankfurt National Assembly ; Participants in the Palatinate uprising | |
Hermann Bezzel | 1861-1917 | Rector of the Neuendettelsauer Diakonissenanstalt | |
Max Bezzel | 1824-1871 | Chess player and problem composer , is considered the oldest Bavarian chess master |
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Friedrich Wilhelm Bock | 1872-1924 | Medical professionals and politicians | |
Friedrich Edler von Braun | 1863-1923 | Politician |
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Hermann Breiting | 1804-1860 | Opera singer ( tenor ) | |
Frederick Brendel | 1820-1912 | Revolutionary, botanist and meteorologist | |
Hans Karl Briegleb | 1805-1879 | Lawyer and politician | |
Karl Bubner | 1902-1987 | Lawyer and politician | |
Karl Buchrucker | 1827-1899 | Protestant theologian and founder of the Inner Mission in Munich |
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Karl von Burger | 1805-1884 | Protestant theologian | |
Walter Caspari | 1847-1923 | Clergyman, theologian and university professor | |
Wilhelm Claussen | 1901-1980 | Ministerial Director and State Secretary in the Federal Ministry of Labor | |
Georg Friedrich Daumer | 1800-1875 | Religious philosopher and teacher Kaspar Hauser |
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Oscar Daumiller | 1882-1970 | Protestant pastor, later senior church councilor and district dean of Munich; Representatives of the Confessing Church during the church struggle | |
Johann Gottfried Dingler | 1803-1875 | Lawyer and politician | |
Oskar von Diruf | 1824-1912 | Balneologist and spa doctor, Bismarck's personal doctor |
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Joseph Disse | 1852-1912 | Anatomist and histologist, discoverer of the Disse space | |
Hans Doerfler | 1863-1942 | Surgeon, secret medical council and chief physician | |
Theodor Doerfler | 1869-1938 | Lawyer and politician | |
Martin Donandt | 1852-1937 | Bremen Senator and Mayor | |
Ernst Drewes | 1903-1991 | District Administrator | |
Friedrich Ebert | 1882-1971 | High school teacher, archaeologist and local researcher in Hof (Saale) | |
Fritz Eckert | 1877-1941 | Mayor of Moers | |
Heinrich Eidam | 1849-1934 | Senior Medical Council | |
Johann Friedrich Philipp Engelhart | 1797-1837 | Chemist | |
Eduard Enslin | 1879-1970 | Ophthalmologist and entomologist ( entomologist ). In particular, he was a specialist in plant wasps (Symphyta) | |
Eduard Eppelsheimer | 1808-1866 | Politician and revolutionary, Member of the Bavarian State Parliament and member of the Frankfurt Pre-Parliament , active supporter of the Provisional Government of the Palatinate in 1849 | |
Otto Erhard | 1829-1888 | Politician and member of the Reichstag | |
Albrecht Eyring | 1844-1920 | Pastor and pomologist | |
Friedrich Fabri | 1824-1891 | Colonial politician | |
Jacob von Falke | 1825-1897 | Cultural and art historian and aesthetician | |
Johannes Falcon | 1823-1876 | historian | |
Eduard August Feuerbach | 1803-1843 | Legal scholar | |
Friedrich Feuerbach | 1806-1880 | Philologist and philosopher | |
Joseph Anselm Feuerbach | 1798-1851 | Classical philologist and classical archaeologist |
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Karl Wilhelm Feuerbach | 1800-1834 | mathematician |
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Wilhelm Fleischmann | 1837-1920 | Agricultural chemist; he is considered the founder of milk science | |
Walter Flex | 1887-1917 | Writer and poet |
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Franz Frank | 1897-1986 | Painter and graphic artist |
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Oskar Fritsch | 1883-1972 | Lawyer and writer | |
Heinrich Gareis | 1878-1951 | Lawyer, district president, police president and SS leader | |
Hugo Gebert | 1888-1944 | Member of the Bremen citizenship | |
Heinrich Christian Friedrich Gebhardt | 1798-1868 | Theologian and member of the Frankfurt National Assembly | |
Hans Geiger | 1882-1945 | Physicist and inventor of the Geiger counter |
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Friedrich Wilhelm Ghillany | 1807-1876 | Protestant theologian, historian and writer | |
Ernst Karl Gillmann | 1890-1966 | Protestant theologian | |
Christian Carl of luck | 1791-1865 | Judges, politicians, poets and art collectors | |
Adolf Günther | 1881-1958 | Legal and political scientist | |
Siegmund Günther | 1848-1923 | Geographer and scientist |
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Dieter Haack | born 1934 | former Federal Minister for Regional Planning, Building and Urban Development, former President of the Evangelical Synod of Bavaria and member of the SPD |
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Friedrich Haas | 1846-1912 | Imperial Council of the Crown of Bavaria | |
Nicolaus Hadermann | 1805-1871 | Pedagogue , journalist and politician for the Free City of Frankfurt | |
Anton Hagedorn | 1856-1932 | Historian, archivist and Hamburg State Councilor | |
Carl Heinrich Wilhelm Hagen | 1810-1868 | Historian and member of the Frankfurt National Assembly | |
Adolf Harleß | 1806-1879 | Protestant theologian and co-founder of the Erlangen school |
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Karl von Hase | 1800-1890 | Professor of Theology and Rector of the University of Jena |
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Wilhelm Havemann | 1800-1869 | historian | |
Carl Friedrich Heintz | 1802-1868 | President of the Chamber of Deputies in Bavaria and Royal Bavarian State Minister of Justice | |
Gottlieb August Herrich-Schäffer | 1799-1874 | Medic and entomologist | |
Johann Georg Hertel | 1801-1874 | Medic and writer | |
Günther Heydemann | born 1950 | historian | |
Ernst-Joachim Hickl | 1931-2010 | Gynecologist and obstetrician | |
Daniel Hilpert | 1837-1923 | Lawyer, honorary citizen of the city of Erlangen | |
Hans Hilpert | 1878-1946 | Teacher and politician, member of the Bavarian State Parliament | |
Johann Wilhelm Friedrich Höfling | 1802-1853 | Protestant theologian and co-founder of the Erlangen school | |
Friedrich Hoffstadt | 1802-1846 | Lawyer, painter and art writer |
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Johann Christian Konrad von Hofmann | 1810-1877 | Protestant theologian and important representative of the Erlangen school |
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Johann Eberhard Käfferlein | 1807-1889 | Lawyer, politician and member of the Frankfurt National Assembly | |
Ludwig Kelber | 1824-1906 | Pastor and writer | |
Friedrich Klinge | 1883-1949 | Politician and Lord Mayor of Goslar 1917–1933 and 1948–1949 | |
Ludwig Koerbitz | 1809-1882 | Mayor of Berneck , member of the Bavarian Chamber of Deputies 1853–1855 | |
Wilhelm Friedrich Christian Gustav Krafft | 1805-1864 | Politician | |
Heinrich Kraussold | 1836-1914 | Lawyer and politician, member of the Bavarian Chamber of Deputies | |
Michael Krück | 1842-1919 | Pedagogue and high school director | |
Gustav Landgrave | 1857-1932 | Classical philologist and high school director | |
Gustav Langbein | 1833-1915 | Superintendent and court preacher | |
Heinrich Leo | 1799-1888 | Historian and Prussian politician |
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Johann Michael Leupoldt | 1794-1874 | Psychiatrist and university professor | |
Wilhelm Lohe | 1808-1872 | Protestant theologian and founder of the mother house for deaconesses in Neuendettelsau |
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Ernst Loesch | 1860-1946 | Painter and writer | |
Norbert Mahla | 1798-1875 | Lawyer and politician; Mayor of Landau in the Palatinate 1843–1848 | |
Karl Mann | 1850-1925 | Politician; Mayor of Rothenburg ob der Tauber | |
Hermann Merkel | 1873-1957 | Forensic doctor and university professor | |
Karl Merkenschlager | 1885-1967 | Lawyer and mountaineer; 1945–1946 acting mayor of the city of Traunstein | |
Karl Michahelles | 1807-1834 | Zoologist and doctor | |
Julius Miedel | 1863-1940 | Teacher, city archivist, historian and honorary citizen of Memmingen | |
Hermann von Münch | 1813-1883 | Member of the Bavarian Chamber of Deputies and Mayor of Hof | |
Lorenz Theodor Nagel | 1828-1895 | Publicist, journalist and civil servant | |
Karl Friedrich Nagelsbach | 1806-1859 | Classical philologist |
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Karl-Heinz Neukamm | 1929-2018 | President of the Diakonisches Werk Deutschland (1984-1994), former chairman of the board of the Rummelsberger Anstalten | |
Julius von Niethammer | 1798-1882 | Lawyer and politician | |
Gottfried Osann | 1798-1866 | Chemist and physicist |
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Friedrich Paulsen | 1846-1908 | Pedagogue and philosopher; he is considered the father of the modern high school |
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Rudolf Paulsen | 1883-1966 | writer | |
Hans Petri | 1880-1974 | Protestant theologian | |
Friedrich Pfaff | 1825-1886 | Geologist and mineralogist | |
Hans Ulrich Vitalis Pfaff | 1824-1872 | mathematician | |
Hermann von Pfaff | 1846-1933 | Bavarian Finance Minister |
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August von Platen | 1796-1835 | poet |
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Samuel Preiswerk | 1799-1871 | Swiss reformed pastor and hymn poet | |
Albert Preu | 1868-1944 | Administrative lawyer and mayor of the city of Bayreuth 1919–1933 | |
Georg Friedrich Puchta | 1798-1846 | Lawyer and professor for Roman law and canon law in Munich, Marburg, Leipzig and Berlin | |
Heinrich Puchta | 1808-1858 | Protestant pastor and song writer |
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Heinrich Rathke | born 1928 | Former regional bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Mecklenburg and head bishop of the United Evangelical Lutheran Church in the GDR (VELK-GDR) | |
Heinrich Ranke | 1830-1909 | Anthropologist and Professor of Pediatrics | |
Hans von Raumer | 1820-1851 | Politician and member of the Frankfurt National Assembly | |
Rudolf von Raumer | 1815-1876 | Linguist and Germanist | |
Friedrich Ludwig von Rechteren-Limpurg-Speckfeld | 1811-1909 | Politician and Bavarian major general | |
Joseph Martin Reichard | 1803-1872 | Politician and revolutionary, member of the Frankfurt National Assembly , President of the Provisional Government of the Palatinate in 1849 | |
Johann Edmund Reichold | 1838-1902 | Mayor of Erlangen | |
Heinrich Reincke | 1881-1960 | Medical professionals and politicians | |
Julius Reincke | 1842-1906 | Archivist and historian | |
Theodor Renaud | 1844-1910 | writer | |
Rudolph von Richter | 1835-1919 | President of the Bavarian Senate at the Reich Military Court | |
Heinrich Riedel | 1903-1989 | Protestant theologian and pastor | |
Carl Georg Ritter | 1871-1965 | Surgeon in Greifswald, Posen and Düsseldorf |
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Leonhard Roesler | 1839-1910 | German-Austrian chemist and oenologist as well as director of the kk chemical-physiological experimental station for viticulture and fruit growing in Klosterneuburg | |
Ludwig Roediger | 1798-1866 | Fraternity activist and philologist | |
Hermann von Rotenhan | 1800-1858 | Bavarian Royal Chamberlain and President of the Chamber of Deputies in Bavaria | |
Julius von Rotenhan | 1805-1866 | Landlord and royal Bavarian government official | |
Christian Roth | 1873-1934 | Lawyer, administrative officer and politician ( DNVP , NF , NSDAP ) | |
Karl Ludwig Sand | 1795-1820 | radical German fraternity |
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Julius Friedrich Scheidemantel | 1806-1891 | Lawyer and member of the Bavarian Chamber of Deputies | |
Georg Schepss | 1852-1897 | classical philologist and high school teacher | |
Kurt Scherzer | 1920-2006 | Lord Mayor of the City of Fürth 1964–1984 | |
Adolf von Scheurl | 1811-1893 | Theologian and legal scholar | |
Eberhard Freiherr von Scheurl | 1873-1952 | Lawyer and university professor at the Nuremberg Commercial College | |
Julius Schieder | 1888-1964 | Oberkirchenrat and district dean of Nuremberg; Representatives of the Confessing Church during the church struggle | |
Karl Schmidt | 1899-1980 | Ophthalmologist and professor for ophthalmology, rector of the University of Bonn and the University of Strasbourg | |
Paul Schmidt | 1898-1976 | Inventor, inventor of the Schmidt tube | |
Theodor Schmidt | 1867-1942 | Bavarian member of parliament and theologian | |
Ernst von Schneider | 1846-1914 | Reich judge | |
Michael Schobert | 1821-1881 | Mayors of Münchberg and Dinkelsbühl, member of the Bavarian state parliament | |
Simon Schoeffel | 1880-1959 | Protestant regional bishop in Hamburg | |
Christian Friedrich Schönbein | 1799-1868 | German-Swiss chemist, discoverer a. a. of ozone |
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Peter Schönlein | 1939-2016 | Lord Mayor of the City of Nuremberg 1987–1996 | |
Karl Friedrich Scholler | 1810-1863 | Theologian , writer and member of the Second Chamber of the Bavarian Estates Assembly (1845–1848) | |
Otto Schottenheim | 1890-1980 | Lord Mayor of Regensburg, doctor of medicine and SS brigade leader | |
Friedrich Schubarth | 1804-1871 | Lawyer and Mayor of Regensburg 1856–1868 | |
Carl Heinrich Schultz | 1805-1867 | Doctor and botanist | |
Hermann Schultz | 1836-1903 | Protestant theologian and professor for the Old Testament in Basel, Strasbourg, Heidelberg and Göttingen; Abbot of the Bursfelde Monastery | |
Ernst Seifert | 1887-1969 | Surgeon and Rector of the University of Würzburg (1938–1945) | |
Otto Seifert | 1853-1933 | Doctors and university professors | |
Christoph von Seiler | 1822-1904 | Lawyer and Second Mayor of Nuremberg | |
Franz Ferdinand Seitz | 1823-1898 | Bavarian member of the state parliament | |
August Siebert | 1805-1855 | Physician and director of the state hospital in Jena; Politician, member of the Reichstag in 1848 and member of the Thuringian state parliament | |
August Sperl | 1862-1926 | writer | |
Gustav Springorum | 1862-1927 | District Administrator in Waldbröl and Fulda, District President of Kassel | |
Friedrich Julius Stahl | 1802-1861 | Lawyer and professor for legal philosophy in Würzburg and Erlangen as well as politician in Prussia |
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Karl Christian Stauber | 1814-1860 | Bavarian member of the state parliament | |
Otto Steengrafe | 1877-1948 | Member of the Bremen Citizenship, President of the Administrative Court | |
Carl August von Steinheil | 1801-1870 | Physicist and builder of the first telegraph line in Munich |
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Rudolf Stich | 1875-1960 | surgeon |
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Ludwig Sternecker | 1852-1914 | Mayor of Dinkelsbühl 1882–1913 | |
Max Stirner | 1806-1856 | Philosopher and journalist |
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Karl Stöber | 1796-1865 | Writer and Evangelical Lutheran clergyman, founding member | |
Viktor von Strauss and Torney | 1810-1899 | Politician and hymn poet |
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Johannes Strebel | 1832-1909 | Organ builder | |
Friedrich Strobel | 1822-1875 | Lawyer and politician | |
Karl Stützel | 1872-1944 | Politician and Bavarian Minister of the Interior 1924–1933 | |
Gottlieb von Thäter | 1846-1912 | Bavarian major general | |
Gottlieb von Thon-Dittmer | 1802-1853 | Bavarian politician, minister and from 1836 to 1848 mayor of Regensburg ; in 1848 he belonged to the so-called Ministry of Dawn . |
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Johannes Trümpy | 1798-1861 | Swiss politician , judge and doctor . Member of the National Council 1851–1857 | |
Hermann Wagner | 1840-1929 | Geographer and cartographer | |
Johann Andreas Wagner | 1797-1861 | zoologist | |
Rudolf Wagner | 1805-1864 | Anatomist, physiologist and discoverer of the female egg |
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Heinrich Carl Welsch | 1808-1882 | Bath doctor | |
Ludolf Weidemann | 1849-1939 | Protestant clergyman and writer; Latin teacher from Thomas Mann | |
Hermann Weigmann | 1856-1950 | Milk researcher and microbiologist | |
Johann Michael Freiherr von Welser | 1869-1943 | Administrative lawyer and State Secretary in the Weimar Republic | |
Ludwig von Welser | 1841-1931 | Bavarian baron and civil servant in higher service | |
Heinrich Wiegand | 1855-1909 | Director General of North German Lloyd | |
Friedrich Winter | 1902-1982 | Lawyer and politician | |
Johann Georg August Wirth | 1798-1848 | political writer of the Vormärz and initiator of the Hambach Festival |
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Fritz Wündisch | 1910-1994 | Lawyer and historian | |
Friedrich Albert von Zenker | 1825-1898 | Doctor and pathologist |
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Rudolf Zenker | 1862-1941 | Romanist , Provencalist and Medievalist | |
Adolf von Zerzog | 1799-1890 | Politician and member of the Frankfurt National Assembly | |
Joseph Zeyer | 1801-1875 | Lawyer, member of the Bavarian Chamber of Deputies | |
Joseph Gerhard Zuccarini | 1797-1848 | botanist |
literature
- Heinrich Wiegandt: History of the Erlangen fraternity, part 1 - From the founding of Teutonia to the dissolution of Arminia, Erlangen 1877.
- Heinrich Wiegandt: History of the Erlangen fraternity, 2nd part - The Bubenreuther, Bremen 1883.
- Friedrich Reuther: The Erlangen fraternity 1816 to 1833, Erlangen 1896.
- Ernst Höhne: The Bubenreuther - history of a fraternity, Erlangen 1936.
- Julius Andreae, Fritz Griessbach: The fraternity of the Bubenreuther, Erlangen 1967.
- Hans-Georg Balder: The German (n) Burschenschaft (en) - Your representation in individual chronicles. Hilden 2005, pp. 129-131.
Web links
- Homepage of the fraternity of Bubenreuther
- Collection of color cards from the Bubenreuther fraternity
- Homepage of the Mörsbergei
Individual evidence
- ↑ Hans König : Boys, Knots and Philistines. Erlanger student life from 1743 to 1983. Nuremberg 1983, p. 26.
- ↑ Burschenschaft der Bubenreuther (responsible for these pages in terms of § 6 TDG / § 6 MDStV): "About us". Retrieved July 26, 2017 .
- ^ EH Eberhard: Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 35.
- ^ Students / connections: Chaste Foxes , Der Spiegel , February 20, 1967
- ↑ Our story. Retrieved July 26, 2017 .
- ↑ Turtling lads. Retrieved May 22, 2018 .
- ^ Burschenschaft der Bubenreuther: "Declaration for the 200th anniversary" . Erlangen July 2017, p. 2-3 .
- ^ Helge Dvorak: Biographical Lexicon of the German Burschenschaft. Volume II: Artists. Winter, Heidelberg 2018, ISBN 978-3-8253-6813-5 , p. 188.
- ^ SPD and fraternities: "Influence of old gentlemen up to the party executive" , Der Spiegel , January 17, 2006