Corps Lusatia Leipzig

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Corps Lusatia
coat of arms
country
University
Foundation, endowment
SC
Joined the KSCV
1848
Nazi era
"Dissolution" on February 11, 1936 , active operation in SC comradeship and Corps Misnia IV
1. Laying
1946 Misnia in Erlangen, from 1949 Lusatia in the Erlangen Senior Citizens' Convention
2. Relocation
Relocation
Lusatia again in Leipzig in 1990
tape
Circle
   Corps Lusatia Zirkel.png
Motto
Libertas vita carior!
Corporation association
address
Karl-Heine-Strasse 14
04229 Leipzig
Website

The Corps Lusatia Leipzig is a mandatory student union in the Senior Citizens' Convention in Leipzig . In 1848 the corps was one of the founders of the Kösener Seniors Convent Association . The active Lusatians study at the University of Leipzig . The old men also include alumni of the Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen , the Free University of Berlin , the Technical University of Berlin , the Silesian Friedrich-Wilhelms-University of Breslau , the University of Hamburg , the University of Cologne and the RWTH Aachen .

Color and motto

The Lausitzers wear the steel-blue-gold-red ribbon and a blue student cap in the small Biedermeier format. The fox ribbon is steel blue and red.

The motto is Libertas vita carior!

history

Cantonal division of the SC in the Kingdom of Saxony (1814)
Solemn Corps Convent of the Corps Lusatia in the Hotel de Prusse in Leipzig (50th Foundation Festival 1857)

Students from Lausitz ( lat. Lusatia) founded the corps with the colors blue-red-gold on September 7th, 1807. The constitution of the corps dates from January 13th 1808. On January 13th 1808 Lusatia took the name Coniunctio Lusato-Polonica on. It returned to its previous name on August 9, 1808 and changed the sequence of colors to blue-gold-red on March 24, 1832. In response to the dealership endeavor of Urburschenschaft Lusatia founded with peers in 1821 on the Rudelsburg the general senior Convent Jena-Leipzig-Halle , the precursor of Kösener Senior Convents-Verband .

Lusatia and the other Leipzig corps were suspended by the university on March 12, 1887 because of a declaration of disrepute . For this purpose she donated “Cimbria” on April 21, 1887 with the colors light blue-black-cherry red. The suspension ended on September 10, 1888.

Following a suggestion from Leipzig University Rector Karl Lamprecht , Lusatia played a leading role in founding the General Student Committee (AStA) at Leipzig University in 1911 . Walther Grosse from Lausitz was entrusted with the drafting of the statutes and appointed to represent the rector in negotiations with the various student groups. In November 1911 the AStA was founded on the basis of Grosses elaboration. The Leipzig corporations were thus able to assert their primacy over the free student body in student co-administration.

At the instigation of the local head of the German student body , the University of Leipzig suspended the corps in April 1934. The reason was disputes with the NS student union . Lusatia successfully resisted. After the dissolution of the HKSCV on September 28, 1935, Lusatia suspended on February 11, 1936. With the Corps Budissa , Saxonia Leipzig and Thuringia Leipzig , she carried on her tradition in the comradeship of the Margrave of Meißen , first at the Sachsenhaus, then at the Lausitzerhaus continued to camouflage. During the Second World War , soldiers from the student companies continued their corps life at the University of Leipzig. They fought lengths in the secret Leipzig weapon ring. After their attempt to re-establish the Kösener SC-Verband on the Rudelsburg in 1944 , the Gestapo initiated proceedings for high treason .

Since it proved impossible to survive under the communist regime in Leipzig after the Second World War, the corps operations were initially relocated to the Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen in 1946 . In Erlanger senior Convent Lusatia was one of the 22 Corps, which in January 1950 in the community of interests banded together and prepared the reconstitution of KSCV.

In 1958 the corps moved to West Berlin . There, in 1968, the Free University legally enforced its approval as a student association. After the German reunification , Lusatia returned to her home university in 1990. Since 1993 it has also carried on the tradition of the Corps Lusatia Breslau , founded in 1832 . Lusatia Breslau was a member of the SC zu Köln while in exile in West Germany and, according to the tradition of the Technical University of Wroclaw, had another location at RWTH Aachen University .

Since 2005 Lusatia has been opposing official efforts to move the corps at the University of Leipzig out of the field of vision of the student body. A lawsuit was pending as a result; the Corps' claim to be linked to the university website has been denied.

On site

EM Emil Munz, chairman of the oKC 1861

In the years 1861, 1895, 1914 and 1987 (Berlin), Lusatia appointed the chairman of the oKC as the presiding suburb corps. The Tübingen suburb spokesman (1959) was also from Lusatia. Paul Hirche (Lusatia Leipzig, Neoborussia Berlin) supported Leonhard Zander in his Kosen reform initiative in 1881.

External relations

Former corp house at Karlstrasse 7 (1910)

Lusatia is the oldest blue corps , but is also in relationship contracts with corps from other Kösener circles , with independent corps and with a corps of the Weinheim senior citizens' convention . During the cartel with the Corps Franconia Jena (August 11, 1837 to May 9, 1842) the corps boys wore both ribbons. They were later entitled to do so.

Cartel Corps

Corps were close friends

Friendly Corps

Conceptual relationships

Holder of the Klinggräff Medal

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

  • Hagen Reischel (1991)
  • Rüdiger B. Richter (1993)
  • Jan-David Hecht (2004)

Individual members

Icon of Lusatia (from Helm. White)

Since the foundation in 1807, over 1,400 members of the corps have been accepted into the inner corps association. Leipzig Lusatians who are no longer living in alphabetical order:

Local officials

Artists, writers and journalists

Mediciners

Scientists and engineers

  • Hermann Pauly (1870–1950), chemist ( Pauly reaction )
  • Georg Gottlieb Pusch (1791–1846), metallurgical engineer, chemist and geologist, professor of chemistry and metallurgy, mountain ridge and head of the Warsaw mining and metallurgical section, founder of the geology of Poland
  • Julius Upmann (1838–1900), chemist, explosives expert

Parliamentarians and ministers

Philologists and historians

Judges and prosecutors

soldiers

Civil servants

Theologians

literature

  • Richard Andree : Chronicle of the Corps Lusatia in Leipzig 1807 to 1877. Extract from the Annals of the Corps, Leipzig 1877.
  • Richard Andree: History of the Corps Lusatia in Leipzig 1807 to 1898. Leipzig 1898.
  • Erich Bauer : History of the Corps Lusatia in Leipzig 1807-1932. Zeulenroda 1932.
  • Egbert Weiß : Lusatia contra NSDStB 1934 . In: Einst und Jetzt , Vol. 17 (1972), pp. 145-153.
  • Egbert Weiß: Lusatians in the War of Liberation 1813/15 . In: Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 29 (1984), pp. 11-16.
  • Egbert Weiß: The pistol duels of the Leipzig Lausitz in the 19th century . In: Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 50 (2005), pp. 161-189.
  • Egbert Weiß: Leipzig student duels in the 19th century - a foray into the annals of the Corps Lusatia . In: Sebastian Sigler (Ed.): Face yourself - and stand! . Festschrift for Klaus Gerstein. Essen 2010, ISBN 978-3-939413-13-4 , pp. 157-170.
  • Egbert Weiß, Hans Lipp, Helmut Weiß: Active in the monarchy. Leipzig Corps students 1807–1918. CVs of the Leipziger Lausitzer. Commemorative publication for the 210th Corps Lusatia Foundation Festival, Leipzig 2017 . Publishing house Schmidt, Neustadt an der Aisch 2017. ISBN 978-3-96049-017-3 .

Web links

Commons : Corps Lusatia Leipzig  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Paulgerhard Gladen : The Kösener and Weinheimer Corps. Their representation in individual chronicles . WJK-Verlag, Hilden 2007, ISBN 978-3-933892-24-9
  2. dt. "Freedom is more dear to us than life!"
  3. Ernst Meyer-Camberg (Ed.): 21 of the oldest Constitutions of the Corps and their predecessors up to 1810 . Einst und Jetzt , Vol. 26 (1981), pp. 145-150
  4. ^ Egbert Weiß: The general student committee Leipzig 1911 - Corps student university policy before the 1st World War . In: then and now. Yearbook of the Association for Corporate Student History Research 19 (1974), pp. 104–110.
  5. 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. 28.
  6. Administrative Court Berlin in DVBl. 68, 714
  7. File number 2 B 386/07 of the Saxon Higher Administrative Court in Bautzen, decision: http://www.justiz.sachsen.de/ovgentsch/documents/2B386_07.pdf
  8. ^ Ernst Hans Eberhard : Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 86.
  9. Kösener Corpslisten 1960, p. 21

Coordinates: 51 ° 19 ′ 56.4 ″  N , 12 ° 20 ′ 40.7 ″  E