Corps Arminia Munich

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Corps Arminia

coat of arms Circle
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Basic data
University location: Munich
University / s: LMU, TUM
Founding: January 4, 1845
Place of foundation: Aschaffenburg
Corporation association : KSCV
Responsible SC : Munich Senior Citizens' Convention
Color status : colored
Colours:
Fox colors:
Cap: White
Position to the scale : mandatory
Motto: Faithful, firm, free!
Gun motto: Virtus et Honos
Website: Website of the Corps Arminia Munich

The Corps Arminia is a student association in the Munich Senior Citizens' Convention . It stands for color and scale . The Arminians are students and alumni of the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich , the Technical University of Munich , the University of Applied Sciences in Munich and the University of the Armed Forces in Munich . Since 2015, Arminia has also been a traditional bearer of the Corps Hercynia Munich.

Arminia

The colors of the Arminia are green-gold-white with golden percussion , whereby the foxes wear the colors green-white. The student cap is white. The motto of Arminia is Treu, Fest, Frei , the weapon slogan Virtus et Honos! (Virtue and honor). The circle contains the letters AFCV They stand for Arminiae fratrum circulus vivat! (German: "Long live the Arminia brothers' circle!").

history

Arminia princess

In 1807 the first forest institute was established in Aschaffenburg . In the 1820s there was a fraternity called “Arminia” at this university, which constituted itself as a corps on January 4, 1845 via the detours of the connection “Sulphuritia” and the country team “Arminia”. Together with the other two Aschaffenburg Corps Hubertia and Hercynia, Arminia formed the Aschaffenburg Seniors' Convent in 1856 . In 1910 the Forestry University was moved from Aschaffenburg to Munich. On this occasion, the city council of Aschaffenburg organized a garden party on the Kippenburg on July 31, 1910 in honor of the former and former members of the forestry college. The Aschaffenburger Corps moved to Munich on July 31st and were accepted into the Munich Senior Citizens' Convention in the same year .

During the First World War, the active corps operations were suspended. In 1920 the Corpshausverein acquired the property in Schönfeldstrasse, on which the Corpshaus was inaugurated six years later after additions and renovations .

In 1936, the Philistine Committee dissolved the corps under the impression of the changes in the characteristics forced by the National Socialists (such as the Führer principle or the implementation of the Aryan paragraph ). Thereupon the comradeship " Paul de Lagarde " was accommodated in the corp house, to whom the house did not have to be transferred thanks to an existing lease with the "German Hunters". On January 6, 1945, two days after the 100th anniversary of the Foundation, two thirds of the building were destroyed by air raids on Munich .

In the post-war period the house was restored. In 1949, the Corpshausverein leased the lower floor of the north wing to the restaurant "Halali", which still exists today.

Corps operations were resumed on May 24, 1949. From 1949 to 1952, Arminia housed the Corps Bavaria , Palatia , Franconia , Ratisbonia , Transrhenania and Rheno-Palatia in their home . In 1951 the Munich Seniors' Convent was founded on the Arminianerhaus.

On June 13, 2015, the bodies of the now suspended Corps Hercynia (also from Aschaffenburg) and the Corps Arminia decided to merge to form Corps Arminia. The Corps has since acted as Corps Arminia - the traditional bearer of the Corps Hercynia . This created one of the corps with the largest number of members, with around 350 members. After the compulsory games, Arminians can fight another one on the Hercynene ribbon, which has happened twice so far (end of 2016).

Conditions

Life corps without friendship relationships

In 1953, Arminia entered into a traditional relationship with Corps Silvania Tharandt in order to preserve the legacy of Silvania over the time of the German division .

Arminians

  • Hermann von Fürst (1837–1917), forest scientist, director of the Aschaffenburg Forestry University
  • Max Endres (1860–1940), forest scientist, rector of the Ludwig Maximilians University
  • Lorenz Wappes (1860–1952), forest scientist, ministerial director, chairman of the German Forestry Association (1919–1933)
  • Gustav Adolf Krauss (1888–1968), forest scientist
  • Josef Fortner (1893–1969), veterinarian and hygienist
  • Fritz Nüßlein (1899–1984), hunting and forest scientist
  • Paul Beickert (1912–1999), Professor of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology
  • Alfred Nikolaus Witt (1914–1999), professor for orthopedics in Munich
  • Bernd Becker (1940–1994), forest scientist, professor of dendrochronology
  • Hermann Sand (1940–2014), author and local history researcher
  • Josef Hollerith (* 1955), Member of the Bundestag

Hercynia

The Hercynia connection was founded on November 15, 1847 at the Aschaffenburg Forestry School with absolute satisfaction. She formed the Aschaffenburger SC with Arminia, but resigned on June 25, 1849. She declared herself a Corps on May 26, 1854 and rejoined the SC on February 1, 1857. When the Forestry University was dissolved and the courses were relocated to Munich, Hercynia also went to LMU on October 15, 1910. She resigned at MSC and was reciprocated on December 9, 1910 . In the era of National Socialism suspended on 8 November 1935, the Corps reconstituted in the spring of 1936 for just over two months. From 1938 she looked after the SC comradeship "Houston Stewart Chamberlain" with Guestphalia Munich (WSC) . The old gentlemen's association was reactivated on November 15, 1948. Former members of the comradeship could be accepted. The Silva student association was founded on March 1, 1949 as a traditional bearer . From March 4, 1950, the federal government was again called Hercynia.

Hercynians

Hercynia
Fritz Bergmiller (1875–1930), forester and hunting writer
Gerhard Conrad (1895–1982), Lieutenant General
Hanns Dietel (1905–1987), gynecologist and obstetrician
Georg Escherich (1870–1941), forester, politician and explorer
Valentin Gerlach (1858–1957), hygienist and food chemist
Alex Herlein (1875–1954), paper industry manager
Hans Küßwetter (1909–1965), District Administrator in Dinkelsbühl, District Assembly President of Middle Franconia
Dieter Lau (* 1940), classical philologist and historian
Josef Planke (1877–1945), head forester
Ernst Rothenbacher (1907–1980), District Administrator in Sigmaringen
Konrad Rubner (1886–1974), forest scientist
Albrecht Schlee (1910–1990), District Court Director, Member of the Bundestag
Karl Albrecht Schmidt (1898–1972), federal judge
Alexander von Schönborn (1924–2011), forest biologist
Klaus Seelemann (1915–1972), pediatrician

literature

  • Wolfgang Bruckmann: A community emerges: for the 150th Federal Festival of the Corps Arminia Munich (Festschrift). Corpshaus-Verlag, Munich 1995.
  • Hermann Sand: Adjee you research polacke! in: Spessart. Journal for the Spessart Cultural Landscape from June 2010, p. 24 f.
  • Ernst Weber and Walter Thoma: History of the Corps Hercynia Aschaffenburg / Munich 1847–1977 . 1977.
  • Friedrich Westhäuser: History of the Corps Arminia . Corpshaus-Verlag, Munich 1979.

Web links

Commons : Corps Arminia München  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ernst Hans Eberhard : Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 97.
  2. Erich Bauer: The comradeships in the area of ​​the Kösener SC in the years 1937-1945 . In: then and now. Yearbook of the Association for Corporate Student History Research 1 (1956), p. 30.
  3. Erich Bauer: The comradeships in the area of ​​the Kösener SC in the years 1937-1945 . In: then and now. Yearbook of the Society for Student History Research 1 (1956), p. 32.
  4. Paul Gerhardt Gladen : The Kösener and Weinheimer Corps. Their representation in individual chronicles . WJK-Verlag, Hilden 2007, ISBN 978-3-933892-24-9 , pp. 86-87.