Constantin Bock from Wülfingen

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Julius August Jobst Constantin Bock von Wülfingen , also Konstantin Bock von Wülfingen , (born  August 11, 1885 in Grimma , †  January 1, 1954 in Springe ) was a German administrative lawyer and politician ( NSDAP ).

Life

He comes from the Lower Saxon noble family Bock von Wülfingen and was the son of the Saxon landscape councilor Kurt Bock von Wülfingen (1850-1940). He studied law and after receiving his doctorate in 1911, he joined the Prussian province of Schleswig-Holstein . He was first employed as an assessor at the Steinburg district in Itzehoe . After the First World War he went as deputy. Police President to the High Presidium in Kiel . Due to his involvement in the Kapp Putsch , he was briefly transferred to the Rhine province in Koblenz , but returned to Kiel in 1921 and was employed at the state tax office .

Bock of Wülfingen that previously the NSDAP (member number 4052386) and the SA had belonged, was after the seizure of power of the Nazis on 12 April 1933 as successor to the sacked Friedrich Knutzen the district of Stormarn appointed. As a result, there were constant differences between him, who despite party membership represented the interests of the district, and the NSDAP district leadership under Erich Friedrich . These disputes were made public a. 1936 on the question of the relocation of the district administrator's seat from Wandsbek to Bad Oldesloe , which Bock von Wülfingen rejected. At the turn of the year 1936/37 he was relieved of his office and moved to the Hamburg administration. As government vice-president in the state administration of the Reichsstatthalters he was responsible for the implementation of the Greater Hamburg Act from 1938 .

In 1942 he had the rank of Sturmbannführer in the SS .

After the end of the war, he was hired by the British occupying forces to handle the business of state administration, a task that he carried out until June 9, 1945. He was only released on December 31, 1945 after the Bund Free Hamburg had presented the occupying power with a list of National Socialists who were still active in the Hamburg civil service on June 11, 1945.

He died in 1954 on the manor Bockerode .

Publications

  • Bock von Wülfingen, Constantin and Walter Frahm : Stormarn. The living space between Hamburg and Lübeck. A country and folklore. Wandsbek 1935
  • Bock von Wülfingen, Constantin: Memorandum on the structure of the Stormarn district and the administrative tasks involved. Wandsbek 1936

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Gothaisches Genealogisches Taschenbuch der Areligen Häuser , Part A, 41st century, Gotha 1942, p. 31
  2. Peter Gabrielsson: Between surrender and formation of the new Senate: The Hamburg administration in the first days after the war in 1945 , in: Heinrich Erdmann: Hamburg after the end of the Third Reich: Political Reconstruction 1945/46 to 1949. Six articles , State Center for Political Education, Hamburg 2000, ISBN 3-929728-50-8 , page 16.