Corps Irminsul

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Basic data
Coat of arms : Coat of arms of the Corps Irminsul Hamburg
Circle : Circle of the Corps Irminsul Hamburg
Colors :
Boy band   Fox band
Universities : University of Hamburg
Helmut Schmidt University
Bucerius Law School
TU Hamburg-Harburg
HAW Hamburg
University of Applied Sciences Wedel
Asklepios Medical School
University of Lübeck
Foundation date: June 23, 1880
Umbrella organization : Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention (WSC)
Motto : Loyalty, friendship, unity at all times!
Gun motto : Amico pectus, hosti frontem!
Address :
Parkallee 62
20144 Hamburg
( Harvestehude )
House Corps Irminsul HH.jpg

The Corps Irminsul is the oldest student union in Hamburg and a corps of the Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention (WSC). The Irminsul is obligatory and colored . It brings together students and former students from the University of Hamburg and the surrounding universities. The corps belongs to the Hamburger Waffenring (HWR) and the White Cartel (with the Corps Franco-Guestphalia Cologne and the Corps Marchia Greifswald ).

Color and designation

The Corps Irminsul leads the color light blue-silver-black with silver percussion . A light blue cap (occipital color) is worn for this. The foxes wear light blue-silver-light blue as a fox band with silver percussion.

The coat of arms of the Corps Irminsul Hamburg symbolizes the four roots of the Corps. It shows the colors light blue-silver-black in the upper right corner and on the left the closed city gate of Hamburg as a symbol for the Corps Cheruskia Hamburg, on the lower right the Greifswald for the Corps Marchia Greifswald, on the left the coat of arms of the city of Halle , a half moon and two stars for the Corps Franconia Halle and in the middle the circle for the Corps Irminsul Marburg .

The name refers to the old Saxon sanctuary Irminsul . The motto is "At any time, loyalty, friendship, unity!" The weapons saying "Amico pectus, hosti frontem!" (German: "your friend's chest, the enemy forehead!").

history

The predecessor corporation of today's Corps Irminsul was the first connection in the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg. Even before the University of Hamburg was founded in 1919, academics and merchant sons from Hamburg decided in the 19th century to found a Free Burschenschaft or Hanseatic Association , which, following the tradition of student associations, cultivated the principle of determination and dueling . The name of the first connection in Hamburg at that time was Cheruskia , which, however, had the current colors of the Corps Irminsul Hamburg and its motto as early as the 19th century. The members came from the old Hanseatic families as well as from the "students" of the colonial institute , which was based in Hamburg. In the more than 130-year history of the corps, three other corps have joined this Cheruskia as fusion corps. As a symbol for the four roots of the corps is u. a. the coat of arms of today's Corps Irminsul Hamburg, in which all four corps can be found.

Weimar Republic and the Nazi era

In 1919 it was decided to found its own umbrella organization ( Teutoburg Representatives ' Day, TVT) in order to take on a decisive role outside of the own university town. From this German-Völkisch oriented TVT, the German Armed Forces emerged in 1927 , which, while circumventing the Versailles Treaty , actively campaigned for the dissemination of military knowledge and for military training among academic youth throughout Germany.

During the fight against the communist uprising in 1918/19 in Thuringia at the beginning of the Weimar Republic, the company joined the Freikorps “Studentenkorps Marburg” (StuKoMa) under Bogislav von Selchow and took part in the Kapp Putsch in 1920 Pages by Wolfgang Kapp and Walther von Lüttwitz .

After disagreements over the course of time extreme has become focus of the German Armed stem, which increasingly is the rising Nazis Andean duck, took place in 1929 in Hamburg quitting the German Armed shaft and after the seizure of power by the Nazis in the spring of 1933 on June 5, the Renoncierung as a corps in the deliberately apolitical Rudolstadt Senior Citizens' Convention (RSC).

On the position of the Hamburg student associations for or against National Socialism and its university policy arm of the reported in February 1932 NSDStB -Hochschulgruppenführer Andreas Feickert in this context to the chairman of the German student body Gerhard Kruger :

“The NSDStB is essentially based on the Lower Saxony gymnastics association, Landsmannschaft Hammonia and the old Strasbourg fraternity Alemannia. Outspoken opponents of the NSDStB are the Hanseatic Association Cheruskia, Free Association Askania and ATV Hegelingen (...) "

- Andreas Feickert
Main building of the University of Hamburg

As a result of the merger with the Corps Irminsul Marburg, which was decided on April 7, 1934, which was also an old armed forces and shared concerns about the emerging Nazi orientation of the German armed forces, the name Irminsul and the circle of today's Corps Irminsul came to Hamburg. In the same year, on May 13, 1934, the Corps Irminsul Hamburg joined the likewise apolitical Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention (WSC) through the merger of the corps umbrella organizations RSC and WSC.

In December 1935, following Rudolf Hess's speech in October of the same year , the members of the Corps decided to dissolve the free, democratically organized student associations or their compulsory integration into the NSDStB, which had been brought into line, and to suspend Irminsul due to the anti-union policies of the Third Reich , although at this point there were no problems with the next generation. The majority of the members of the corps rejected the conversion to their own NS comradeship within the NSDStB, which Irminsul was the oldest Hamburg connection and at that time also the largest connection among the corporations at the Hanseatic University , because one in who did not see the character of the weapons student association being preserved. The old corp house at Schröderstiftstrasse 21 in the Hamburg-Rotherbaum district was then foreclosed in the spring of 1936.

The old gentlemen's association of the Corps, in which all still studying members of the Irminsul were accepted before the suspension, shortly before that on December 14, 1935, still celebrated the - for the time being - last bar and decided by voting at the convention of the following day to only continue to exist in the unofficial to escape the control of the state and Nazi party organs as far as possible. Through regular meetings at various local round tables - u. a. in Hamburg, Marburg and Berlin - and through regular circulars that were sent out until the end of the Second World War, the foundation for the later revival of the corps could be laid.

Since 1945

The rowing club Germania as a corps home

Shortly after the founding of the Federal Republic of Germany, the Corps Irminsul was able to reconstitute in 1949 due to the new democratization in Germany in the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg. Since the old corp house was foreclosed during the Third Reich , the active business had to do without its own quarters in the early years of the young republic. Thanks to the corporate membership of Irminsul in the Hamburg rowing club Germania , its clubhouse on the Outer Alster could be used as a corps home. Nevertheless, they sought to buy their own corp house and found it on November 13, 1958 in the old villa of Reich Chancellor Bethmann Hollweg at Innocentiastraße 15 in the Harvestehude district.

Innocentiastraße 15 remained the center of the corps for 44 years. In 2002, the old corp house was finally sold and a villa was bought, which is located directly on the Innocentiapark . Since then, Parkallee 62 in Harvestehude has been the home of the Irminsul.

Today's gun motto comes from the Corps Frankonia Halle, whose former rulers joined the active Corps Irminsul in 1954. The Corps Franconia Halle was also an RSC corps and saw the merger as an opportunity to preserve its own traditions within the active Corps Irminsul after the ban on student associations in the GDR .

The Corps Marchia Greifswald , which was also a merger corps from 1954, was reconstituted in 1992 as one of the first corps in the new federal states after the end of the GDR through the efforts of the Corps Irminsul and its individual members. The Corps Irminsul was able to win the support and cooperation of its Rector Professor Hans-Jürgen Zobel and that of the Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Prime Minister Professor Alfred Gomolka for the reconstitution celebrations on March 23, 1992 in the baroque auditorium of the Ernst-Moritz-Arndt University of Greifswald . This reconstitution fulfilled the promise that the Corps Irminsul made to the two old gentlemen's associations of its merger corps from Halle and Greifswald in 1954 to do everything in its power to enable the individual corps to be reactivated. Since the winter semester 2014/2015 there has been an official job relationship with the Corps Baltica-Borussia Danzig to Bielefeld.

Although the Irminsul was originally founded on ethnic principles, non-German members were never excluded, not even during the Nazi dictatorship. With the US lecturer at the Philipps University of Marburg Bradley, who nonetheless became a guest and later guest of honor at Irminsul without the first volume , he was also one of the first members of the outer corps association to be of non-German nationality. The Corps Irminsul currently has members of South African, Costa Rican, Hungarian, Swiss, Finnish, American and German nationality.

The number of members of the Corps Irminsul has fluctuated between 100 and 200 members since it was founded, with the corps killed in the world wars being a huge bloodletting. Over 50 members lost their lives in World War I and over 60 in World War II. Nevertheless, at the time of its 130th anniversary in 2010, the oldest Hamburg connection was again the largest connection in the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg, measured by the number of active student groups in Hamburg.

Irminsul in public

Academic lecture series

The corp's own academic discussion series itself has a tradition of over 100 years. In addition to various professors, u. a. the curator of the University of Marburg, Walter Hassenpflug, and representatives of the officer corps, the anti-Semite and member of the Reichstag , Ferdinand Werner , later the first National Socialist President and subsequently Prime Minister of Hesse , was won over as a speaker during the period of the German Empire . He was followed as personalities of the Weimar Republic a. a. the Reichstag member Reinhold Wulle , the Romanist and co-founder of the Stahlhelm Karl Voretzsch and the "sea devil" Felix Graf von Luckner . During the initial existence of the Corps Irminsul over the first three years of the Third Reich, the Hamburg State Councilor Hellmuth Becker could be won over as the only external speaker for the foundation party in 1933 due to the anti-socialist attitude of the National Socialists .

After the revival of the Irminsul lecture series under the name Harvestehuder Talks with renowned speakers such as the bestselling authors Siegfried Lenz and Asfa-Wossen Asserate as well as the Federal Ministers Hans "Johnny" Klein and Edzard Schmidt-Jortzig in Hamburg, the series of lectures has now become an academic one Become an institution. It follows the principle of freedom of expression and also offers a platform for speakers whose opinions do not necessarily correspond to the zeitgeist. So spoke u. a. also the chairman of the Iranian Revolutionary Council Sejjed Mohammad Beheschti and Brigadier General Reinhard Günzel, known from the Hohmann affair, at the house of the corps.

Furthermore, despite the protest of the newspaper taz , the Irminsul invited the controversial political scientist Konrad Löw as a speaker in the Hamburg City Hall, where the Corps celebrated its festivities for the 125th Foundation Festival together with several members of the citizenship. In addition to representatives of the citizenship, high circles of the Hamburg Office for the Protection of the Constitution campaigned for the approval of the celebration of the Corps Irminsul in the Hamburg City Hall.

Although during the Harvestehuder talks u. a. SPD and FDP politicians have also spoken, the CDU- led Senate of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg was attested by some media to be particularly close to Corps Irminsul in 2010 because of the senators who served as speakers at the Harvestehude talks.

On the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the series of talks in 2011/2012, Hermann Rauhe in his capacity as Honorary President of the University of Music and Theater , the former President of the European Parliament Klaus Hänsch , the Chairman of the Central Council of Muslims in Germany, Ayyub Axel Köhler and the Opening lecture by the Hamburg Senator for Economic Affairs a. D. Gunnar Uldall and, at the end, the Hamburg regional rabbi Shlomo Bistritzky on the house of the Corps Irminsul.

The fight for the mensur for officers of the Bundeswehr universities

After the founding of the Bundeswehr Universities in Munich and Hamburg, a dispute over the mensur rights of prospective officers escalated during their studies. With reference to the soldier's duty to maintain health in accordance with Section 17 (4) of the Soldiers Act, the university management issued a ban on the length of the scale for soldiers at the Bundeswehr universities.

The Corps Irminsul, which several prospective officers had already joined shortly after the Helmut Schmidt University was founded , saw this ban as contradicting the principle of proportionality of a constitutional state. In the ensuing legal dispute before the First Military Service Senate of the Federal Administrative Court, for which the Irminsul was able to win the well-known military lawyer Erich Schwinge as a procurator, the Irminsul Corps succeeded in overturning the scale ban for students at the two Bundeswehr universities.

The university group of the corps in the student parliament and in the ASTA

Furthermore, the Corps Irminsul had its own representation in the student parliament of the University of Hamburg in the university organization "Pro Universitate". Before that there was a group called "Uni Aktiv" that represented all Hamburg student associations in parliament.

In order to differentiate itself from the fraternities, the Corps Irminsul founded its own university group "Pro Universitate" in the 1990s, which it succeeded in 1998 for the first time after the 1968 revolution, together with the real-social democratic university group , the "St. Pauli Gruppe ", to provide the RCDS and the Liberals with an Asta to which no left-wing extremist groups belonged. As a member of the student parliament, the Irminsul and Estonian Vice Consul Sebastian Greve, whose family is one of the greatest patrons of the University of Hamburg, gave a Knight's Cross address to his grandfather Helmut Greve at the inauguration of the Greve wing of the main building on November 19, 1998 .

Due to the membership structure and the appearance with an elitist habitus, the Corps Irminsul is attested to be close to the conservative wing of the CDU. The chairman of the then JUSO university group (now: "hard times - young socialists and student representatives") in the student parliament of the University of Hamburg is quoted in this context in the forum "politik.de" from 2003 with the words:

"At the university there is a saying about the Irminsul that it is so black that there is no more room for the brown."

- Michael Schaaf

Press

In addition to the above reports, the Hamburger Abendblatt published on October 4, 2003 an article about the Corps Irminsul after its acquisition of a new villa in the Hamburg district of Harvestehude with the title "Sword fights over the bedroom" and in the article "Senatskarussel in Hamburg" in the Abendblatt from The Corps Irminsul was mentioned on August 17, 2010 about the planned reshuffle of the cabinet by the designated Hamburg Mayor Christoph Ahlhaus , as it should have excellent contacts with the Senate, in particular with the Interior Senator Heino Vahldieck , and the members of the Corps should have influence in the Hamburg CDU.

Furthermore, a poem of the Corps Irminsul was published in the Spiegel edition of May 21, 1979 and the Corps itself in the article "Between mondän und bourgeois" from the "World" of January 19, 2008 and in the Zeit article "The fathers pay again "Mentioned July 10, 1952. In addition, the newspaper " Junge Welt ", which ascribes itself to the left-Marxist political spectrum, defines the Corps Irminsul as "elite right-wing academics" and the tabloid newspaper "Hamburger Morgenpost" sees it in the Irminsul is a representative of the "intellectual, socially acceptable rights".

watch TV

In 1993 the program "Unser Hamburg" dedicated one of its episodes to the Corps Irminsul, in which the principles of the Corps and the differences between the Irminsul and fraternities are shown. Among other things, whether the exclusive leisure time z. B. in the form of the annual champagne bar on the occasion of Bismarck's founding of the empire in 1871, which the Irminsul offers its members, the corps was also part of a report on the program "UniTV" on the Hamburg regional broadcaster in 1996. The accompanying trailer also gives an overview of Hamburg's student associations - starting with some fraternities, some of which were monitored by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution for their political activities, through Catholic-Christian associations that refuse members of other faiths membership, to the Corps Irminsul , which is apolitical via the statutes and does not impose any denominational conditions on its members, but as a mandatory association requires all its members to beat scales. Furthermore, the principle of tolerance of the Corps (corps student can be any student, regardless of his ethnic or social origin, his political views, his skin color or religion) was explained using the example of Irminsul in the program "100Grad" on the topic of student associations on "Deutsche Welle TV" .

Members

"The Second" by Karl Prahl
  • Axel Bruhn (1904–1983), CDU member in Hamburg, Member of the Bundestag
  • Alfredo Dornheim (1909–1969), professor at the Universidad Nacional de Cuyo in Argentina and co-founder of the International Association for German Studies
  • Klaus Dudek (* 1954), professor at the University of Applied Sciences for Finance in North Rhine-Westphalia
  • Wolfgang Eymer (1905–1969), City Councilor in Stettin, SS-Standartenführer and chairman of the Pomeranian Gau Court and the Reich Court of Honor of the National Socialist League of Old Masters
  • Hermann Frenzel (1895–1967), professor and dean at the University of Göttingen, developer of the Frenzel glasses
  • Hermann Gebbers (1879–1952), District Administrator of Bückeburg and Stadthagen
  • Georg-Friedrich Kahl (1936–2019), doctor, pharmacologist and toxicologist
  • Hans Kähler (1912–1983), South Seas language researcher at the University of Hamburg
  • Hans Klose (1880–1963), head of the Reich Agency for Nature Conservation and the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation and Landscape Management , "father" of the Reich Nature Conservation Act of 1935
  • Franz Lehmann (1881–1961), professor at the University of Greifswald
  • Karl-Heinz Lesnau (1935–1996), CDU member in Berlin, member of the Berlin House of Representatives
  • Kurt Möbius (1908–1993), Hessian state fire director
  • Bernd Niehaus Quesada (* 1941), Foreign Minister of the Republic of Costa Rica and Ambassador of Costa Rica to Germany, Hungary and the Czech Republic, professor at the Universidad de Costa Rica
  • Karl Prahl (1882–1948), painter and member of the Hamburg Secession
  • Hergen Sander (* 1943), professor at the University of Finance in North Rhine-Westphalia
  • Kurt Schmidt-Klevenow (1906–1980), SS leader and head of the General Directorate of the Ministry of Agriculture of the Reich Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia
  • Wilhelm Schnee (1908–1978), district administrator for the Schwaz district in Tyrol, government director at the Federal Audit Office and data protection officer
  • Otto Schubert (1918–1978), professor at the Giessen University of Applied Sciences, holder of the Knight's Cross
  • Karlheinz Spielmann (1908–1980), rescuer and honorary citizen of the city of Iphofen
  • Kurt Stapelfeldt (1898–1985), German radio pioneer and director of the forerunner of Northwest German Radio NORAG
  • Otto Waldmann (1885–1955), professor at the University of Greifswald and President of the Reichsforschungsanstalt Insel Riems, discoverer of the vaccine against foot and mouth disease
  • Max Wartemann (1905–1993), State Secretary at the Ministry of Finance of the State of Schleswig-Holstein, Mayor of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck

Holder of the Klinggräff Medal

The Klinggräff Medal of the Stifterverein Alter Corpsstudenten was awarded to:

  • Jan Eckert (1996)
  • Christian Anders (2011)

See also

literature

  • Michael Doeberl , Otto Scheel , Wilhelm Schlink , Hans Sperl , Eduard Spranger , Hans Bitter and Paul Frank (eds.): Academic Germany , Volume 2: The German universities and their academic citizens , Berlin 1931, pp. 817, 830–831 , 944.
  • Klaus Großweischede: 100 years Corps Irminsul , Hamburg 1980.
  • Hartmut Elers and Andreas Walther: 125 years Corps Irminsul , Hamburg 2005.
  • Druckhaus Stelljes: 75 years of the White Cartel in the WSC , Bremervörde 1997.
  • Erich Geißler: The German Armed Forces (DW) in the Teutoburg Representatives' Day (TVT) 1919-1935 . In: Einst und Jetzt 9 (1964), pp. 166–178.
  • Paulgerhard Gladen : The Kösener and Weinheimer Corps: Your representation in individual chronicles . 1st edition. WJK-Verlag, Hilden 2007, ISBN 978-3-933892-24-9 , pp. 241-244 .
  • Otto Carstens: Active Primer - Guide for Young Corps Students , Hamburg 2009.
  • Christian Anders: Student Couleur in Historical Waters , in: Pommern - Magazine for Culture and History 04/2009.
  • Heinrich Diedler: Corps in the new federal states - Corps Marchia Greifswald , in CORPS-Magazin 02/2002.
  • Christian Anders and Ingmar Scholtz: Studying where others go on vacation - the University of Greifswald and its fraternity student environment , in CORPS-Magazin 01/2010.
  • Christian Anders and Otto Carstens: Many paths to success - 130 years of Corps Irminsul Hamburg , in CORPS magazine 03/2010.
  • Klaus DeParade: The fate of the Weinheimer Corps and their relatives during the Third Reich , Weinheim 2010.
  • Otto Carstens and Christian Anders: A century of Harvestehude talks - traditional and high-quality lecture culture in Hamburg , in CORPS-Magazin 01/2011.
  • Jan Jope: Exchange of ideas with unreserved freedom of thought - Harvestehuder talks at Corps Irminsul , in CORPS-Magazin 01/2012.

Web links

Commons : Corps Irminsul  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ernst Hans Eberhard : Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 62.
  2. Feickert to Krüger on February 23, 1932, cited above. in Krause, Huber, Fischer (eds.): Everyday university life in the Third Reich - The Hamburg University 1933-1945 , p. 207, Hamburg 1991
  3. Georg Friedrich Kahl in 100 Years Corps Irminsul , Hamburg 1980, p. 103 ff.
  4. Kurt Herrmann in 100 Years Corps Irminsul , Hamburg 1980, p. 7 ff.
  5. Klaus Großweischede in 100 Years Corps Irminsul , Hamburg 1980, p. 59 ff.
  6. ^ List of speakers since the reconstitution of the Irminsul Corps
  7. ^ Lecture - Freedom of Expression in the "Free West". At: SWG -Regio Hamburg , March 23, 2009 ( PDF ( Memento of the original from January 25, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove them Note. ) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.swg-hamburg.de
  8. ^ German identity. In: taz , June 23, 2005 Archive link ( Memento of the original from February 8, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / dokmz.wordpress.com
  9. The non-person at the Festkommers. In: Communications from the Hamburg Judges' Association , September 15, 2005 [1]
  10. ^ History in the corset of political criminal law. In: Deutschland-Journal , Heft 80, 2010 ( PDF  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. )@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.deutschlandjournal.de  
  11. Hamburg correspondence. In: Leipzigs Neue , September 17, 2010 ( PDF  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. )@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.leipzigs-neue.de  
  12. Back home. In: Preußische Allgemeine Zeitung , February 25, 2012 [2]
  13. Az. I WB 59/74
  14. Like cohabitation . In: Der Spiegel . No. 4 , 1976 ( online ).
  15. ^ Tamm Museum: Unwanted Guests ?. In: Hamburger Lehrerzeitung der GEW , June 26, 2006 Archive link ( Memento of the original from March 5, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.gew-hamburg.de
  16. Hamburg's richest student. In: Mopo , June 8, 1999 [3]  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.mopo.de  
  17. Corporated Ideals. In: bnr , November 11, 2001 [4]  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.politik.de  
  18. Epee fights over the bedroom. In: Hamburger Abendblatt, October 4, 2003 [5]
  19. ^ Senate carousel in Hamburg. In: Hamburger Abendblatt , August 17, 2010 [6]  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.xing.com  
  20. Too many connections. In: taz , August 17, 2010 [7]
  21. Birgit Gärtner: Open to the right - Dubious Hamburg Senators. In: Our Time , September 3, 2010 [8]
  22. Senators wanted. In: Mopo , August 16, 2010 Archive link ( Memento of the original from March 7, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.mopo.de
  23. ↑ Concave mirror . In: Der Spiegel . No. 21 , 1979 ( online ).
  24. Between sophisticated and bourgeois. In: Die Welt , January 19, 2008 [9]
  25. The fathers pay again. In: Die Zeit , July 10, 1952 [10]
  26. Ahlhaus is not alone. In: Junge Welt , August 18, 2010 [11]
  27. Intellectual danger from the right. In: Mopo , September 5, 2000 [12]  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.mopo.de  
  28. Our Hamburg. In: NDR television , 1993 [13]
  29. Student associations in Hamburg. In: Uni-TV , 1996 [14]
  30. ^ Student connections in Hamburg - trailer. In: Uni-TV , 1996 [15]
  31. 100 degrees - student associations. In: DW-TV , 1990s

Coordinates: 53 ° 34 ′ 38.6 "  N , 9 ° 59 ′ 4.1"  E