Carl Boehme

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Carl Boehme

Emil Hugo Carl Böhme (born July 13, 1842 in Reudnitz , † May 10, 1904 in Annaberg ) was a German lawyer and liberal politician ( DFP , NLP ). He was a member of the Saxon state parliament and the Reichstag .

Live and act

Boehme attended from 1848 to 1852, the first public school of Leipzig and then to 1859 the Thomas School in Leipzig . His father was a department head in the Leipzig postal administration and later became the main newspaper administration at the Leipzig main post office. From October 1859 to April 1863 he studied law and camera studies at the University of Leipzig . He completed his studies with a PhD. jur. from. From July 1863 to September 1864 he worked as a legal assistant for the lawyer Heinrich Theodor Koch in Buchholz in the Ore Mountains . In May 1865 he became a trainee lawyer at the District Court of Annaberg. After he was dismissed from civil service in May 1868, he settled as a lawyer in Annaberg. He was admitted to the Chemnitz Regional Court, Annaberg District Court and the newly established Commercial Court in Annaberg in 1891. He was a deputy member of the Zwickau Bar Association. In 1873 he was also licensed as a notary .

From 1871 until his death he was city ​​councilor of Annaberg and from 1875 acted as head of the city council assembly. From March 1871 to January 1874 and from June 1893 to June 1898 he represented the 21st Saxon constituency in the German Reichstag . From 1875 to 1881 he was a representative of the 34th rural constituency of the Second Chamber of the Saxon State Parliament . He acted as the Chamber's first secretary throughout.

In 1900 he was made an honorary citizen of Annaberg.

literature

  • Elvira Döscher, Wolfgang Schröder : Saxon parliamentarians 1869–1918. The deputies of the Second Chamber of the Kingdom of Saxony in the mirror of historical photographs. A biographical handbook (= photo documents on the history of parliamentarism and political parties. Volume 5). Droste, Düsseldorf 2001, ISBN 3-7700-5236-6 , p. 351.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Josef Matzerath : Aspects of the Saxon State Parliament History - Presidents and Members of Parliament from 1833 to 1952 , Dresden 2001, p. 92