Corps Hasso-Nassovia
Corps Hasso-Nassovia |
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coat of arms | Circle |
Basic data | |
University / s: | Philipps University of Marburg |
Place of foundation: | Marburg / Lahn |
Foundation date: | July 15, 1839 |
Corporation association : | KSCV |
Colours: | Light may green-white-sky blue |
Type of Confederation: | Men's association |
Position to the scale : | beating |
Motto: | Virtuti semper corona! |
Website: | www.hasso-nassovia.de |
The Corps Hasso-Nassovia Marburg is an obligatory and color-bearing student union in the Kösener Seniors Convents Association (KSCV). The corps brings together students and alumni of the Philipps University of Marburg .
history
Hasso-Nassovia has the color light may green-white-sky blue with silver percussion . In addition, a student hat in light may green is worn. The fox ribbon is white-light may green-white.
The motto is Virtuti semper corona! The emblem is Vivant fratres intimo foedere iuncti! (VFIFI).
Hassia Marburg
The Corps Hassia was founded on June 23, 1807 by members of Landsmannschaft Lahnania with the colors black-green-red and the motto Virtus et honos fortificant circulum . The colors are said to have led a Lower Hessian wreath in Marburg around the order of harmonists as early as 1802 . Since 1824, probably since June 19, 1822, she used the colors green-white-red for green hats. After some members had resigned because of disputes and had founded a new, very short-lived Marcomannia on November 29, 1837, Hassia dissolved at the end of the winter semester 1837/38. It was renewed on May 27, 1838. Teutonia Marburg , next to Hassia the only corps still existing in the winter semester 1838/39, was donated on August 7, 1825 with the colors blue-red-gold and blue cap. When it was last renewed on May 12, 1833, it was blue-white-red, then blue-white-gold. Teutonia had formally dissolved on November 13, 1838. In quarrels, refusals of satisfaction and fights on the market, the (former) senior of the Hessians tore the senior of the Teutons off the beard. That is why Hassia had to disband in early 1839. According to the Kösener corps lists in 1930, it had 601 members by then. For the 300th anniversary of Philipps University, Hassia had 46 couples and 16 adjutants, more representatives than Teutonia, Lahnania and Hanovia put together.
When both the Teutons (May 10th) and the Hessians (July 15th) opened again in the SS 1839, both changed one of their colors. Teutonia returned to blue-red-gold. Hassia added Nassovia to her name and chose the colors dark green-white-dark blue with silver percussion. That was a combination of the old colors of the Hesse and the Göttingen Nassauer. The renoncen band was initially dark green-dark blue-white without percussion, but was changed on June 14, 1841 to white-green-white with silver percussion. All of the last Hessians formed the core of the corps, insofar as they were active again in Marburg. These included Otto von Gehren and the founder Emil Haupt . The country team character of the corps was still so strong at that time that the addition of "Nassovia" resulted in the transfer of Teutons who came from the Duchy of Nassau . Among them were the founders Friedrich Großmann , Wilhelm Spieß and Eduard Lindpaintner . The other donors Wilhelm Ammann , Wilhelm Dörr , Hermann Trägel and Carl Trägel as well as the first foxes Ferdinand Conradi and Ludwig Seyberth also came from Nassau. As a high school graduate from Weilburg , Haupt had been Göttinger Nassauer. So the 15. July 1839 , the foundation date of the Hasso Nassovia; the addition "Nassovia", however, conceals its history as a direct continuation of the old Hassia.
In the Reichstag (North German Confederation) sat the Marburg Hessians Karl Bernhardi and August Kugler and the Hessen-Nassauers Carl Braun and Wilhelm Liebknecht .
Recent history
In 1876, 1918 and 1919 Hasso-Nassovia appointed the chairman of the oKC. On March 16, 1920, the former naval officer Bogislav von Selchow was elected leader of the Marburg student corps (Stukoma) at a meeting under the leadership of the first charge of the Hasso-Nassovia. The meeting took place at the Hessen-Nassauer-Haus because the Corps was chairing the Marburger Waffenring at that time. The purpose of the association was to actively support the Kapp Putsch and to protect the corporation houses from a feared storm by communist workers. After the collapse of the putsch, the Stukoma was used at the request of the Reichswehr in Thuringia, where six members of the corps were involved in the Mechterstädt murders .
On July 16, 1933, the Corps introduced the Führer principle . Under pressure from the Allgemeine Deutscher Waffenring and the KSCV, she also committed herself to the Aryan paragraph . Thereupon the sixteen corps brothers affected put down the tape in 1933/34. The honorary member Rudolf Brunzlow thanked them in 1946 "for the heavy sacrifice". At Georg Popp , Fritz Waldschmidt , Friedrich Leonhard , Franz Leonhard , Ferdinand Selberg , Charles Edward Ludorff , Leo Rhodovi , Fritz rooms , Herbert Augstein , Fritz breeze , Hans Popp , Günther Augstein , Heinrich Lauber , Waldemar Zimmermann , Hans Fielitz and Alfred Hennecke recalls since 2007 a memorial plaque in the entrance hall of Hasso-Nassovia's corp house. The inscription reads:
THEY WAIVED OUR TAPE TO SAVE THE CORPS.
YOUR VICTIM AND SORRY, BE CONTINUOUS ADMINISTRATION!
Like all other Marburg connections, Hasso-Nassovia broke up on May 20, 1936; the old rule continued to exist. From 1938 old men supported the Allmenroeder comradeship . At the end of 1946, eleven students (all former soldiers) formed the Hesse student community. Under the protection of Franz Leonhard , it was supported by the old rulers until it was absorbed into the reconstituted Corps Hasso-Nassovia on July 16, 1950.
Corp house
In 1888 the first corp house was built. For reasons of space, it had to give way to today's Corphaus, which was built in 1909 in Lutherstrasse.
Conditions
The formerly black Hasso-Nassovia can be seen as the pivot of the so-called mouse-gray corps. You are considered to be strong in fencing.
- Cartels
- Corps Nassovia Wuerzburg
- Corps Rhenania Bonn
- Corps Suevia Freiburg
- Corps Baruthia Erlangen
- Corps Franconia Tübingen
- Corps Borussia Halle
- Corps Saxonia Leipzig
- Friends
- Corps Rhenania Heidelberg
Members
In alphabetic order
- Curt Adam (1875-1941), ophthalmologist
- Christian Albers (1870–1944), notary, Member of the Bundestag
- Walter Bauer (1877–1960), theologian
- Alexander Baustädt (1828–1905), President of the Consistory in Stade
- Friedrich Beneke (1853–1901), classical philologist, high school teacher in Oldenburg, Bochum and Hamm
- Friedrich Benthaus (1884–1978), manager of the coal mining industry, member of the board of directors of Friedrich Krupp AG
- Hans Berckemeyer (1873–1957), honorary member, industrial lawyer in mining
- Hermann Bickell (1844–1897), district director in Zabern
- Hans Bielenberg (1883–1970), lawyer and local politician
- Fritz Bierhaus (1879–1965), industrialist
- August Blencke (1868–1937), orthopedist and university professor
- Bernhard Blencke (1903–1979), orthopedist and university professor
- Dieter Bock (1939–2010) German entrepreneur and hotelier
- Karl Braun (1822–1893), national liberal politician
- Philipp Broemser (1886–1940), physiologist, rector of the LMU
- Hugo Brunner (1853–1922), historian, director of the state library in Kassel
- Axel Bruns (1915–1990), captain, knight's cross holder, senior district director in Celle
- Otto Butterlin (1900–1956), chemist and painter in Mexico
- Carl Claus (1835–1899), zoologist and anatomist
- Paul Cormann (1868–1952), President of the Higher Regional Court in Stettin
- Walter Drenseck (1941–2011), tax lawyer, federal judge
- Rudolf Theis Eden (1883–1925), surgeon (Eden-Hybinette-Plastik)
- Erich Eichelberg (1912–1989), City Director in Celle
- Hermann Ernst Endemann (1796–1846), legal scholar, rector of Philipps University
- Herwart Fischer (1885–1938), forensic doctor
- Joachim Fischer (1910–1988), City Director in Osnabrück
- Karl Fouquet (1855–1937), general
- Otto von Gehren (1817–1896), District Administrator, MdR, MdHdA, honorary citizen of the city of Homberg (Efze)
- Philipp von Gehren (1868–1931), manor owner, district administrator in Goldap
- Reinhard von Gehren (1865–1930), District Administrator, Governor for the Province of Hesse-Nassau, Member of the MdHdA
- Nicola Geisse-Winkel (1872–1932), opera singer (baritone)
- Felix Genzmer (1878–1959), legal historian and Scandinavian
- Theodor Gies (1845–1912), professor of surgery at the University of Rostock
- Carl Götz (around 1820–1879), District Administrator in Hünfeld
- Karl Grimm (1826-1893), lawyer, MdR
- Adolf Hasenkamp (1874–1936), professor of economics at the TH Danzig
- Hermann Hengsberger (1900–1987), federal judge
- Heinrich Heppe (1820–1879), Protestant theologian
- Karl Herquet (1832–1888), archivist and historian
- Helmuth Hertling (1891–1942), marine biologist
- Karl Hertzog (1875–1960), Lord Mayor of Merseburg
- Heinrich Hildebrand (1866–1940), professor for forensic medicine in Marburg
- Albert Hoffa (1859–1907), surgeon and orthopedist
- Kurt Hofmeier (1896–1989), pediatrician
- Wolfram Hucke (1914–2011), Ambassador to Guatemala and Cuba
- Ernst Hueter (1896–1954), professor of theoretical electrical engineering
- Maximilian Jahrmärker (1872–1943), psychiatrist in Marburg
- Adolf Kempkes (1871–1931), co-founder of the German People's Party, 1923 head of the Reich Chancellery
- Wilhelm Kiesselbach (1839–1902), ENT professor in Erlangen
- Werner Kindler (1895–1976), ENT doctor and university professor in Solingen, Berlin and Heidelberg
- Bruno Kirchhof (1890–1976), FDP politician in Lippe
- Ernst Koch (1808–1858), poet lawyer
- Hermann Kümmell (1852–1937), surgeon
- Franz Leonhard (1870–1950), legal scholar in Marburg
- Kurt von Lettow-Vorbeck
- Gerhard Littmann (1910–1973), police chief in Frankfurt am Main
- Walter Lochte-Holtgreven (1903–1987), physicist
- Hermann Loerbroks (1883–1954), Attorney General in Berlin
- Georg Lucas (1865–1930), President of the Reich Economic Court
- Carl Ludwig (1816–1895), honorary citizen of Leipzig, one of the founders of Hasso-Nassovia
- Emil Mannkopff (1836–1918), professor for internal medicine in Marburg
- Karl Erich Marung (1876–1961), doctor and ministerial official
- Viktor von Meibom (1821–1892), legal scholar in Rostock, Tübingen and Bonn
- Peter Friedrich Mengel (1884–1967), administrative lawyer
- Hans Meyer (1897–1963), federal judge
- Alfred Richard Meyer alias Munkepunke (1882–1956), writer, poet and publisher
- Peter Oltmanns (1913–1990), senior district director in Zetel
- Hans von Pezold (1870–1935), sex educator
- Karl Heinrich Piderit (1857–1918), District Administrator in Detmold
- Georg Popp (1861–1943), criminalist
- Ludwig Poppelbaum (1866–1940), Senator of the City of Göttingen, Mayor and honorary citizen of Wesel
- Eckart Ranft (1925–2015), President of the Bremen Finance Court
- Eduard Rehn (1880–1972), surgeon
- Ludwig Rehn (1849–1930), surgeon (first open heart surgery in 1896)
- Johannes Reinmöller (1877–1955), oral surgeon in Rostock and Würzburg
- Albert Ruppersberg (1854–1930), educator and local researcher in Saarland
- Wilhelm Scheffer (1844–1898), MdR
- Georg Schlüter (1859–1938), Mayor of Greifswald
- Adolf Schmidtmann (1851–1911), founder of the Institute for Water, Soil and Air Hygiene
- Carl Schönemann (1854–1920), ophthalmologist, professional politician
- Ludwig Seyberth (1818–1910), bailiff of the Rüdesheim office, district administrator of the Biedenkopf district
- Wilhelm Seyberth (1849–1937), Privy Councilor of Justice, member of the Prussian House of Representatives
- Hans Siefart (1881–1958), business lawyer
- Heinz Dietrich Stoecker (1915–1998), ambassador
- Thomas Strieder (* 1957), ambassador
- Friedrich Suntheim (1849–1927), Reich judge
- Karl Thewalt (1825–1895), Reich judge
- Werner Vogel (1907–1992), politician from Alliance 90 / The Greens
- Hans Heinrich Wachs (1822–1895), physician, landowner, MdR
- Otto Wachs (1874–1941), District Administrator for the districts of Jork and Süderdithmarschen, Member of the Board of the Landesbank of the Province of Schleswig-Holstein
- Otto Wachs (1909–1998), spokesman for the board of HAPAG, bronze medalist at the Olympic sailing competitions in 1936
- Rudolf Weber-Lortsch (1908–1976), SS leader, federal judge
- Werner Wedemeyer (1870–1934), lawyer and university professor, VAC chairman
- Haimar Wedemeyer (1906–1998), son of Werner Wedemeyer, lawyer in financial administration, Olympic sailor and submarine commander
- Carlos Wetzell (1890–1973), industrialist
- Julius Wieting (1868–1922), surgeon and medical officer, Pascha
- Peter Woeste (* 1959), German ambassador to Malawi and Rwanda
- Georg Wolff (1845–1929), high school teacher and archaeologist
- Hermann Wolff von Gudenberg (1812–1880), district administrator
- Alfred Zintgraff (1878–1944), writer, explorer, Chancellor of the Negus of Abyssinia
Holder of the Klinggräff Medal
The Klinggräff Medal of the Stifterverein Alter Corpsstudenten was awarded to:
- Peter Woeste (1989)
- Nils Habbe (2005)
- Andreas Münch (2007)
literature
- Georg Heer : Marburg student life 1527 to 1927 . Marburg 1927 (ceremony for the 400th university anniversary)
- Wilhelm Eckhardt : Hasso-Nassovia: from July 15, 1839 to the autumn of 1847. The Corps Hasso-Nassovia zu Marburg for the 90th foundation festival . Bauer, 1930.
- Fritz Groos: The 4 Hassia zu Marburg, Göttingen, Gießen and Heidelberg, their connections and their history . Einst und Jetzt , Vol. 3 (1958), pp. 102-118.
- Klaus Vassel: Corps history of the Hasso-Nassovia to Marburg 1839-1954. A retelling , 2 vols. Marburg 1979 and 1981.
Web links
- Literature by and about Corps Hasso-Nassovia in the catalog of the German National Library
- Corps Hasso-Nassovia Marburg
- Corps Hasso-Nassovia (SPK)
- Norbert Nail: Pictures from student life in Marburg. Philipps University on the 475th anniversary of its foundation in 2002
- Digitized edition of an anthology with Kommerschriften from the years 1837–1869
Individual evidence
- ↑ German "Virtue always the crown!"
- ↑ dt. "Let the brothers live who are bound by a close bond!"
- ^ Fritz Groos: The 4 Hassia zu Marburg, Göttingen, Gießen and Heidelberg, their connections and their history . In: then and now. Yearbook of the Association for Corporate Student History Research 3 (1958), p. 103.
- ↑ Heer, p. 119
- ↑ a b Heer, p. 131.
- ^ Heer, p. 205.
- ^ A b c Klaus Vassel: Corps history of Hasso-Nassovia in Marburg 1839-1954. A retelling. Volume 1. Marburg 1979, pp. 5-8.
- ^ Corps newspaper of the Hessen-Nassauer. 65, p. 38.
- ^ Ernst Hans Eberhard : Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 92.
- ↑ Helmut Poppelbaum, Wolfgang Brüning, Winold Vogt, Philipp Schütz: The events of Mechterstädt in their contemporary historical context . In: then and now. Yearbook of the Association for Corporate Student History Research 38 (1993), pp. 155-200.
- ^ Klaus Vassel: Corps history of Hasso-Nassovia zu Marburg 1839-1954. A retelling. Volume 2, p. 43. Marburg 1981.
- ↑ Stefan Weichbrodt: A bitter part of our history. Marburg 2007.
- ↑ 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. 29.
- ↑ Handbook of the Kösener Corps Student. Supplementary delivery, 2006