Corps Rhenania Heidelberg
Corps Rhenania Heidelberg |
|
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coat of arms | Circle |
Basic data | |
University / s: | Heidelberg University |
Place of foundation: | Heidelberg |
Foundation date: | January 15, 1849 |
Corporation association : | KSCV |
Colours: | |
Type of Confederation: | Men's association |
Position to the scale : | beating |
Motto: | Virtuti semper corona! |
Gun motto: | Gladius Ultor Noster! |
Website: | www.rhenania-heidelberg.de |
The Corps Rhenania Heidelberg is a mandatory and color-bearing corps ( student union ) in the Kösener Seniors Convents Association (KSCV). It brings together students and former students from the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg .
Color
Rhenania uses the colors "blue-white-red" with golden percussion . In addition, a dark blue hat with a white-red border and white piping is worn. Like all SC Corps in Heidelberg, Rhenania does not have a fox band, the foxes only wear hats, but with a blue, white and blue border.
history
Rhenania I-III, Hassia, Nassovia
The oldest reliably verifiable Rhenania in Heidelberg (Rhenania I) was donated on July 23, 1802 by members of the Rhenania Gießen. It was based on a country team and agitated against the Masonic-influenced student orders that had existed since the second half of the 18th century , but was infiltrated around 1804 by members of the Heidelberg Order of Constantists .
In 1803, Rhenania and Franko-Badenia, founded in 1803, joined forces to form a senior citizens' convent (SC) and agreed on the oldest surviving Heidelberg SC-Comment . After a conflict between the student body and the military in July 1804, both played a key role in the student body moving to Neuenheim . In December 1804 there were tumultuous clashes between the Heidelberg Renoncen and the Constantists. As a result of investigations by the academic authorities, both country teams disbanded in the spring of 1805. On May 19, 1805, three Rhenans (Morgenstern, Wenz, Bayer) participated in the foundation of the Landsmannschaft Palatia (I). From the remnants of the old Rhenania, the two country teams of the Upper Rhine (colors: red-blue-white with silver ) and Lower Rhine ( red-blue-white with gold ) were formed in August of that year .
After the reorganization of the university under Elector / Grand Duke Karl Friedrich von Baden , numerous foreign students moved in from 1805, who founded new, partly short-lived compatriots (Suevia, Guestphalia, Curonia, Vandalia, Hannovera , Holsatia, Hanseatia, Helvetia, Saxo-Borussia and others). In 1806 they agreed a new comment that assigned fixed recruiting cantons to the individual country teams. The division was based on the demarcation of the Peace of Lunéville (1801) and the Peace of Pressburg (1805). The Lower Rhine received Hessen-Darmstadt, Kurhessen, Nassau, Waldeck and the Thuringian states. Its district bordered in the north on the Duchy of Berg, the Duchy of Westphalia, Paderborn, Göttingische and Eichsfeld, in the east on Saxony and Würzburg, in the south on Wertheim, Leiningen, Erbach and the Lower Palatinate and in the west on the Rhine. The Upper Rhine received France including the former German departments on the left of the Rhine, Baden with the exception of the upper principality on Lake Constance and the Baden possessions in Swabia, Switzerland and Franconia, as far as it did not belong to Bavaria.
When the Heidelberger SC split up in 1810, the term corps was first used for a group of the local compatriots, including the Niederrheiner, who later returned to the uniform name Rhenania and probably dissolved soon after the wars of liberation.
In 1818 the Corps Hassia I was founded, which two years later was transformed into Rhenania II. In the minutes of the foundation it was explicitly stated that one sees itself as a continuation of Rhenania from 1802. The phase of Rhenania II falls in the politically heated period of Vormärz . Its members included numerous liberals from Baden and the Palatinate, such as Friedrich Wilhelm Knoebel , Ludwig Frey (both participants in the Hambach Festival ), Friedrich Hecker (leader of the revolution in Baden) and Joseph Martin Reichard (president of the provisional government of the Palatinate). As a result of the events surrounding the storm in prison and the move of the Heidelberg student body to Frankenthal (after differences with the Heidelberg Museum Society over the membership status of students, August 14, 1828), a three-year disrepute was issued against the university, which the SC withdrew a little later. Rhenania II existed until November 3, 1833.
In their place, members of Hassia II, founded in 1829, donated the Corps Rhenania III (until 1842) in July 1836.
In November 1838 foreign corps students, namely members of Nassovia Göttingen, founded the Corps Nassovia II, which recruited its offspring primarily from the grammar school in Weilburg . In addition to Nassovia Göttingen, Nassovia entered into closer relations with the two other Nassau "Landescorps" Hasso-Nassovia Marburg and Nassovia Würzburg, but also maintained a lively exchange with the Corps Rhenania in Bonn.
Rhenania IV
The year of the revolution, 1849, also became the founding year of the Rhenania IV, which still exists today. In a deliberate departure from the small German states , the Nassovia activists dissolved the corps on January 15, 1849 and founded a new Rhenania (IV) on the same day. The constitution, motto (“Virtuti semper corona!”) And Nassovia tradition were adopted. The catchment area expanded over the whole of Germany in the following years. The members of the corps also included students from other European countries and from overseas (Switzerland, Greece, England, the United States, Canada and South Africa). As a member of the Heidelberger SC, the Corps Rhenania has belonged to the Kösener Senioren-Convents-Verband (KSCV) founded in 1848 . In 1872 Rhenania was the presiding suburb corps and also provided Kösener suburb speakers in 1868 and 1877.
The time of the empire is considered to be the "heyday" of corps students. In contrast to the SC Corps Saxo-Borussia, Guestphalia and Vandalia, in whose old rulers East Elbian, Hanoverian and Mecklenburg large agrarians and civil servants dominated, Rhenania developed into a corps of large-scale industry and capital with recruiting focuses in the Rhine-Ruhr area, in Frankfurt, Hamburg and in the central German industrial area. Rhenania was one of the corps that were classified as "particularly exclusive".
In 1875, for the first time, printed "corpschroniken" (semester reports) were sent to the external members (old men). In 1882 the last living old gentlemen of Rhenania II recognized the existing corps as the legal successor to the old Rhenania of 1802/20. Still living members of Rhenania III and Nassovia II were taken over into the corps.
In 1886, Rhenane Emil Hartwich (1843–1886, district judge in Düsseldorf) fell in a duel with Armand Léon Baron von Ardenne . Theodor Fontane used the affair as a template for his novel " Effi Briest ".
Active operations were discontinued from 1914 to 1919 during the First World War. The corps was hardly affected by the politicization of the student body in the early days of the Weimar Republic. The Heidelberger SC maintained its self-chosen isolation and largely sealed itself off from influences from the rest of the student body.
The seizure of power by the National Socialists initially had just as little influence on the corps operations. However, the implementation of the Aryan provisions according to the guidelines of the General German Arms Ring in the spring of 1934 was carried out. On September 8, 1935, the exclusion of the KSCV from the "Community of Student Associations" by the head of the Reich Chancellery, Hans Heinrich Lammers, initiated the dissolution of the association. After its end, the Corps Rhenania also decided to suspend it. Participation in the Heidelberger SC comradeship " Axel Schaffeld " was restrained, limited to financial contributions and was discontinued at the end of the war in 1945. There were no personal and organizational interfaces between comradeship and corps as in other university towns.
The celebration of the 100th foundation festival by the old rulers took place in 1949 in a framework appropriate to the circumstances of the time. In the same year, the “Rhinelander Circle”, which was sponsored by the Heidelberger Rhenanen Association, was formed, which in part continued the forms of the earlier corps, but also sought new approaches for contemporary student coexistence. On May 3, 1951, the old rulers decided to integrate the Rhinelander Circle into the Corps and thus its reconstitution. In the 1950s, Rhenania was the initiator of the establishment of the Heidelberg Interest Group (HIG), the special purpose association of local corporations. After a separate agreement between the SC and the university, it broke with the HIG in 1958. Since then the SC has gone its own way.
In 2011 the Merian travel magazine portrayed the Corps in its Heidelberg edition.
External relations
In the 1870s and 1880s, Rhenania pursued a lively relationship policy and established official relationships with numerous corps in other university cities up to the First World War. a. in Bonn, Gießen, Marburg, Freiburg, Tübingen, Würzburg, Munich, Jena, Leipzig, Halle, Breslau, Göttingen, Berlin, Strasbourg and Zurich. Since the corps did not want to commit itself to a certain direction within the association, stagnation occurred from 1900 and after the First World War a real isolation that could only be overcome shortly before the suspension. Today the Corps maintains friendly relationships with the Corps Suevia Freiburg , Hasso-Nassovia , Nassovia Würzburg and Tigurinia .
Corp houses
After the Corps had gekneipt in changing Heidelberger inns (u. A. In Seppl , most recently at the inn vineyard at the market), in 1882 the purchase of the baroque town house in the main street 231, formerly owned by the theologian Carl Daub and his son- Wilhelm theophoric name Dittenberger found had, as a corporation and the establishment of the "Rheinländische Gesellschaft AG" as the carrier.
When the old house no longer satisfied the changed need for representation, it was torn down and the present Corphaus was built between 1906 and 1909 according to plans by the royal Bavarian court building councilor Eugen Drollinger (Munich) with a mixture of neo-baroque and art nouveau elements. It is the only Art Nouveau building on Heidelberg's main street. At the same time, the house at Neckarmünzgasse 14, located behind the garden, was purchased and converted into a student residence.
Known members
Rhenania I-III (1802-1842)
Surname | Life dates | job | image |
---|---|---|---|
Ludwig Achenbach | 1812-1879 | Lord Mayor of Mannheim | |
Carl Baumgartner | 1790-1847 | Oberamtmann in Durlach, city director in Karlsruhe, member of the Baden state parliament, honorary citizen of Durlach and Karlsruhe | |
Carl Baumüller | 1786-1851 | Badischer Oberamtmann, Ministerialrat and Obervogt | |
Carl Beeck | † 1840 | Badischer Oberamtmann and Ministerialrat | |
Ferdinand Freiherr von Biedenfeld | 1788-1862 | Belletrist, translator and dramaturge, theater director in Berlin, Magdeburg, Breslau and Weimar | |
Friedrich Landolin Karl von Blittersdorf | 1792-1861 | Grand-Ducal Minister of State of Baden | |
Emil August von Dungern | 1802-1862 | Ducal Minister of State of Nassau | |
Heinrich Escher | 1789-1870 | Swiss lawyer, politician and legal scholar | |
Heinrich von Feder | 1822-1887 | Politician, member of the Second Chamber of Baden, leader of the Liberals of Baden | |
Makarius Felleisen | 1802-1850 | Baden Oberamtmann, head of the district offices of Sinsheim, Buchen and Wolfach | |
Ludwig Frey | 1810-1871 | Lawyer and publicist, participant in the Hambach Festival | |
Alexander von Geiger | 1808-1891 | Industrial French politician | |
Karl Ferdinand von Gerolt | 1790-1851 | Appellate judge at the Court of Appeal in Cologne, initiator and member of the Central Cathedral Building Association in Cologne | |
Alexander Grebel | 1806-1870 | Justice of the peace, member of the preliminary parliament, the 2nd Chamber of the Prussian National Assembly and the Prussian House of Representatives | |
Eberhard von Groote | 1789-1864 | Germanist, writer and politician, chairman and honorary member of the Cologne Cathedral Building Association | |
Joseph von Groote | 1791-1866 | Chancellor of the Archdiocese of Cologne, member of the First Chamber of the Prussian Landtag and the Prussian House of Representatives | |
Friedrich Hecker | 1811-1881 | Politician and revolutionary, member of the Second Chamber of Baden | |
Jakob Herrmann | around 1785 – after 1834 | Head of the district offices of Osterburken and Adelsheim | |
Carl Heinrich Georg von Heyden | 1793-1866 | Governing Mayor of Frankfurt am Main, natural scientist and collector, entomologist, co-founder of the Senckenberg Natural Research Society | |
Carl Honsell | 1805-1876 | Bailiff and head of the district office of Konstanz, court judge | |
Johann Christian Hundeshagen | 1783-1834 | Forest scientist | |
Friedrich Wilhelm Knoebel | 1802-1871 | Politician and publicist, participant in the Hambach Festival | |
Ludwig von Krutheim | 1819-1885 | Oberamtmann in Walldürn and Eberbach | |
August Lufft | 1801-1887 | Administrative lawyer, government director in Speyer | |
Franz Flamin Meuth | 1800-1884 | Industrialist, founder of the worsted spinning mill, the gas works, the ultramarine factory and the iron works in Kaiserslautern | |
Christian Friedrich Mühlenbruch | 1785-1843 | Jurist, ord. Professor in Rostock, Greifswald, Königsberg, Halle (Saale) and Göttingen | |
Ferdinand Noell | 1801-1893 | Mayor, member of the Oldenburg State Parliament | |
Adolph von Ottweiler | 1789-1812 | Son of Prince Ludwig von Nassau-Saarbrücken, Wuerttemberg officer | |
Philipp Pfeiffer | 1784-1859 | Oberamtmann, District Office Director in Neckarbischofsheim, Ladenburg, Adelsheim and Emmendingen | |
Joseph Martin Reichard | 1803-1872 | Politician and revolutionary, member of the Frankfurt National Assembly, President of the provisional government of the Palatinate | |
Josef von Sensburg | 1787-1870 | Oberamtmann in Offenburg | |
Christoph Trefurt | 1790-1861 | Baden State Councilor, President of the Baden Ministry of Justice and the Baden Chamber of Accounts, Upper Court Chancellor in Mannheim, member of the Erfurt Union Parliament and the First and Second Chamber of the Baden Assembly of Estates | |
Alexander Wallau | 1820-1882 | Oberamtmann in Kenzingen, Donaueschingen and Lahr | |
Carl Theodor Welcker | 1790-1869 | Lawyer and politician, member of the Frankfurt National Assembly (Upper Rhine) | |
Carl Werry | 1819-1868 | High court attorney, member of the Oldenburg State Parliament | |
Jakob Wundt | 1787-1844 | Senior magistrate, chief executive in Schopfheim, Bretten, Müllheim, Mannheim, Bruchsal and Ettlingen |
Nassovia II (1838-1849)
Surname | Life dates | job | image |
---|---|---|---|
Adolph Dombois | 1823-1891 | District administrator in Erkelenz and in the Unterwesterwaldkreis | |
Theodor von Dusch | 1824-1890 | Mediciners | |
Clemens August Heckmann | 1825-1884 | District Administrator in Zell and Adenau | |
Georg August Rudolph | 1816-1893 | Lord Mayor of Marburg | |
Kuno Damian von Schütz-Holzhausen | 1825-1883 | Politician; Founder of an emigrant colony in Peru | |
Ludwig Seyberth | 1818-1910 | District Administrator of the Biedenkopf district | |
Karl Thewalt | 1825-1895 | Reich judge | |
Eduard Wissmann | 1824-1899 | Writers and politicians |
Rhenania IV (since 1849)
Surname | Life dates | job | image |
---|---|---|---|
Albert Ahn | 1867-1935 | Publisher and industrialist in Cologne | |
Heinz-Eberhardt Andres | 1908-1977 | District Administrator of the Alzey District, Member of the State Parliament (FDP) | |
Karl Andres | 1876-1935 | Landowner, viticulture lobbyist and politician, member of the Prussian House of Representatives, the Rhenish Provincial Parliament and the Prussian State Council | |
Hermann Ascher | 1844-1931 | President of the General Commission for the Province of Westphalia | |
Ernst Bail | 1871-1951 | Ministry official and business lawyer | |
Richard Bank | 1867-1934 | Administrative lawyer, District Administrator of the Heinrichswalde district, Ministerialrat in the Prussian Ministry of Finance | |
Fritz Baum | 1879-1955 | Manager of the German coal and steel industry | |
Heinrich Becher | 1865-1941 | Lawyer, father of Johannes R. Becher | |
Hermann von Bechtold | 1836-1902 | Provincial Director and District Council in Giessen | |
Paul Behrend | 1853-1905 | Agricultural chemist, professor of food chemistry and agriculture at Gdansk University of Technology | |
Paul Bertololy | 1892-1972 | Doctor and writer, honorary citizen of Lembach (Bas-Rhin) | |
Georg Bode | 1838-1910 | Lawyer, historian and natural scientist | |
Georg Bodenstein | 1860-1941 | Administrative lawyer, State Secretary in the Reich Ministry of Transport | |
Richard Boeninger | 1874-1944 | Administrative lawyer, district administrator of the Grafschaft Bentheim district | |
Carl von Braun | 1852-1928 | President of the Higher Regional Court of Augsburg | |
Adolf Buehl | 1860-1948 | Hamburg State Council, Director of Public Welfare | |
George of Caro | 1849-1913 | Silesian industrialist, secret councilor of commerce and entails commissioner at Wilkendorf Castle near Strausberg | |
Anastasios Christomanos | 1841-1906 | Chemist, professor and rector of the University of Athens | |
Joachim F. Christopeit | * 1936 | Manager | |
Hans Deloch | 1881-1956 | Administrative lawyer, district administrator in Cosel, Beuthen and Oels | |
Friedrich Dernburg | 1833-1911 | Politician, publicist, writer, leader of the Hessian Progress Party, member of the Reichstag (national liberal), editor-in-chief of the “Nationalzeitung” in Berlin | |
Ferdinand Emmerling | 1831-1912 | Lawyer in the financial administration, chairman of the Hessian state insurance office | |
Walter Ernst | 1857-1928 | Consistorial President in Wiesbaden and Frankfurt am Main | |
Adolf Ernst von Ernsthausen | 1827-1894 | Politician, member of the Prussian House of Representatives, Lord President of West Prussia, Lord Mayor of Koenigsberg, honorary citizen of Danzig and Elbing | |
Ernst Flemming | 1870-1955 | Mining captain and ministerial director in the Prussian Ministry for Trade and Industry, deputy chairman of the Supervisory Board of Preussag | |
Eugene Franck | 1832-1893 | Lawyer and politician, member of the Second Chamber of the Hessian Estates (Center Party) | |
Walter Graeff | 1876-1934 | Art historian | |
Joachim Gres | * 1947 | Lawyer and member of the German Bundestag (CDU) | |
Horst Habs | 1902-1987 | Physician, professor of hygiene at the University of Bonn | |
Eckart Hachfeld | 1910-1994 | Writer, lyricist and songwriter | |
Franz Hamburger | 1874-1954 | Physician, professor of paediatrics at the Universities of Graz and Vienna | |
Emil Hartwich | 1843-1886 | Lawyer and sports pioneer | |
Johann Maria Heimann | 1878-1931 | Industrialist, partner and member of the management of the Johann Maria Farina company opposite Jülichs-Platz in Cologne | |
Theodor Hergenhahn | 1833-1893 | Legal scholar | |
Hubert help | 1820-1909 | Entrepreneur and politician, member of the Reichstag (Nassauer, from 1886 also Rhenane) | |
Ernst Himburg | 1851-1919 | Member of the Reichstag and the Prussian House of Representatives | |
Karl Holstein | 1908-1983 | Industrialist, President of the German-Belgian-Luxembourg Chamber of Commerce, President of the Münster Chamber of Commerce and Industry, member of the board of the German Industry and Commerce Conference | |
Carl von Joest | 1858-1942 | Manor owner at Eichholz Castle near Wesseling, entrepreneur and politician | |
Franz Karcher | 1867-1915 | Industrial and private banker | |
Alfred Kast | 1856-1903 | Physician, professor of internal medicine at the University of Wroclaw | |
Richard Koenigs | 1853-1921 | Administrative lawyer, district administrator of the Lennep district, honorary citizen of Lennep and Wermelskirchen | |
Herbert Kruger | 1905-1989 | Lawyer, u. a. Professor at the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, the Reichsuniversität Strasbourg and the University of Hamburg | |
Gustav Krug by Nidda | 1836-1918 | Hessian State Council and Deputy Plenipotentiary to the Federal Council | |
Wilhelm Küchler | 1846-1900 | Lord Mayor and Honorary Citizen of Worms, GhGL. Hessian finance minister and deputy authorized representative to the Federal Council | |
Wilhelm Lanz | 1829-1882 | Lord Mayor of Wiesbaden | |
Jacob of Lavale | 1843-1925 | Railway entrepreneur, director of the Palatinate Railways | |
Albert Lederle | 1874-1931 | Board member (district administrator) of the Ludwigshafen am Rhein district office | |
Adolf Lehne | 1856-1930 | Chemist, professor and head of the textile chemistry department at the Technical University in Karlsruhe | |
Rudolf Leonhard | 1851-1921 | Jewish legal historian, four-time professor; Rector in Marburg and Breslau | |
Georg Leubuscher | 1858-1916 | Medic and social reformer | |
Gustav von Mallinckrodt | 1859-1939 | Industrialist and politician | |
Rudolf Manz | 1908-1996 | Forensic doctor and university professor | |
Ludwig moon | 1839-1909 | Chemist, co-founder of the Brunner Mond Comp. in London, Vice President of the Chemical Society in London, art collector and patron | |
Wilhelm Mutzenbecher | 1832-1878 | Oldenburg State Council | |
Karl von Neidhardt | 1831-1909 | Size Hessian Real Privy Council, envoy and extraordinary representative to the Federal Council for Hesse-Darmstadt, Lippe and Schaumburg-Lippe | |
Paul Nethe | 1849-1926 | General of the Infantry | |
Hermann Olfe | 1884-1969 | Industrialist, board member of Gelsenkirchener Bergwerks AG | |
Gerhard Oncken | 1836-1898 | Landowner, Mayor of Wittmund, MdHdA | |
Anton sacrifice gel | 1850-1915 | Member of the Reichstag and the Prussian House of Representatives | |
Gerhard Paulus | 1922-2002 | Industrialist and politician, member of the state parliament in Baden-Württemberg (FDP) | |
Alexander von Peez | 1829-1912 | German-Austrian politician and industrialist, member of the Austrian House of Representatives and manor house | |
Wilhelm Pfitzner | 1853-1903 | Professor of Anatomy at the University of Strasbourg | |
Ernst Plagemann | 1882-1953 | Director and co-owner of Danziger Eisen-Handelsgesellschaft mbH, General Director of Polish-Danziger Eisenkonzern AG, Chairman of the Management Board of Deutscher Eisenhandel AG in Berlin, Chairman of the Finance Council of the Free City of Gdansk, Chairman of the Supervisory Board of the Bank of Danzig | |
Anton Rasina | 1843-1923 | Oberamtmann, board member of the district offices of Pfullendorf, Engen, Tauberbischofsheim and Offenburg, chairman of the board of the Baden insurance company for disability and old age insurance | |
Franz Hermann Reschke | 1871-1934 | District President in Lüneburg | |
Hans Reschke | 1904-1995 | Lord Mayor and Honorary Citizen of Mannheim, Deputy President and Honorary Member of the German Association of Cities | |
Carl Rudolph | 1841-1915 | Administrative lawyer, Imperial Japanese Undersecretary of State | |
Franz Rotzoll | 1850-1927 | President of the Hanover Monastery Chamber | |
Eugene Rümelin | 1880-1947 | diplomat | |
Philipp Schaeper | † 1926 | District Administrator of the Achim and Nordhausen districts, honorary citizen of Ellrich | |
Waldemar Scheithauer | 1864-1942 | Industrialist, general director of Werschen-Weißenfelser Braunkohlen AG | |
Christian Schlichter | 1828-1883 | Lord Mayor of Wiesbaden, member of the Prussian House of Representatives | |
Carl Schmidt-Polex | 1853-1919 | Lawyer and industrialist | |
Rudolf von Schoen-Angerer | 1857-1943 | Administrative lawyer, government vice-president in Minden, Breslau and Marienwerder | |
Heinrich Snow | 1871-1949 | Governor of German East Africa, member of the Reichstag, President of the German Colonial Society, important representative of colonial revisionism in the Weimar Republic | |
Fritz Schultz-Merzdorf | 1890-1956 | writer | |
Albert Seelmann | 1852-1919 | President of the General Customs Directorate for the Province of Saxony | |
Kurt Siemers | 1873-1944 | Hamburg merchant, shipowner and banker | |
Theodor Spaeth | 1833-1911 | Administrative lawyer, member of the Reichstag (national liberal) | |
Wilhelm Spiritus | 1854-1931 | Lord Mayor and honorary citizen of Bonn, member of the Prussian manor house | |
Carl Spude | 1852-1914 | Administrative lawyer, district administrator in Bochum, senior government councilor in Arnsberg | |
Ernst Stahnke | 1887-1976 | surgeon | |
Kurt Steffens | † 1910 | District Administrator of the District of Fulda | |
Ernst Stephann | 1847-1897 | Estate owner and politician, MdR | |
Johann Stobbe | 1860-1938 | Chemist, professor at the University of Leipzig | |
Samuel Hanson Stone | 1849-1909 | American Politician and Auditor of Public Accounts for the State of Kentucky | |
Ernst von Sury | 1850-1895 | Swiss neurologist, forensic doctor and university lecturer | |
Richard Teubner | 1846-1902 | Senior magistrate in Meßkirch, Bühl, Sinsheim and Kehl, administrative judge at the Baden Administrative Court | |
Friedrich Tilemann | 1839-1914 | Mayor of Melle, governor of the north office, district administrator of the Iburg district, member of the provincial parliament of Hanover | |
Erich father took | 1893-1964 | Entrepreneur and newspaper publisher | |
Nikolaus von Werder | 1856-1917 | Administrative lawyer, district president of Königsberg (Prussia), member of the Prussian House of Representatives | |
Heinrich Weydmann | 1848-1922 | Swiss lawyer and politician, President of the Cantonal Court in Appenzell Innerrhoden | |
Max Wirth | 1822-1900 | Journalist and economist (Rhenania III, from 1899 also Rhenania IV) | |
Eduard Zacharias | 1852-1911 | Botanist, professor in Strasbourg and Hamburg |
Sources and literature
swell
literature
- Gerhart Berger, Detlev Aurand: ... Weiland Bursch zu Heidelberg ... A commemorative publication by the Heidelberg corporations for the 600th anniversary of Ruperto Carola . Heidelberg 1986, pp. 111-113.
- Paul Bertololy: " Alt-Heidelberg - Ewiger Studententraum ", 1962, reprint 1997 (novella. Free processing of the events around the death of the Rhenan Carl Specht, who fell in a duel in 1855)
- Florian Hoffmann: 100 years of the Heidelberg Rhenanenhaus. History - architecture - environment. 1909–2009 , Heidelberg 2009
- Richard August Keller: Contributions to the history of the first Heidelberg country teams. 1802-1806 , Diss., Heidelberg 1914
- Berthold Kuhnert: History of the Corps Rhenania Heidelberg 1802–1869 , 1913, ND Heidelberg 1997
- Werner Lamprecht, Peter Kutter (Eds.): 150 Years Corps Rhenania Heidelberg 1849–1999 , Heidelberg 1999
- [Gerhard Müller]: Directory of members of the Corps Rhenania Heidelberg including its previous connections 1802–1999 , Heidelberg 1999
- Albert Trapp: 112 years of Rhenania Heidelberg . [Cologne 1960]
- Publications on Corps Rhenania Heidelberg in the catalog of the German National Library
Individual evidence
- ^ Ernst-Günter Glienke: Civis Academicus . Handbook of the German, Austrian and Swiss corporations and student associations at universities and higher schools. Born in 1996, Lahr 1996, p. 121.
- ^ Eckhard Oberdörfer: The Heidelberg prison . Cologne 2005, p. 159, ISBN 3-89498-132-6 .
- ↑ Mentioned in: Mark Twain : Bummel durch Deutschland. Chapter 4: Student Life. The five corps. Munich 2006, p. 35.
- ^ German university calendar. Winter semester 1913/14. Leipzig 1913, p. 149.
- ^ Richard August Keller: Contributions to the history of the first Heidelberger Landsmannschaften 1802–1806 . Heidelberg 1914, pp. 12-22
- ^ Richard August Keller: Contributions to the history of the first Heidelberger Landsmannschaften 1802–1806 . Heidelberg 1914, p. 35
- ^ A b 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.
- ↑ Edgar Süß: The Palatinate in the "Black Book". A personal historical contribution to the history of the Hambach Festival, early Palatinate and German liberalism . Heidelberg 1956, pp. 49 and 78
- ↑ Florian Hoffmann: "Boys out!" - The move of the Heidelberg student body to Frankenthal in 1828 . In: Frankenthal once and now 1/2, 2000, pp. 48–51
- ^ Klaus Vassel: Nassovia-Heidelberg - Contribution to the history of the corps . In: then and now. Yearbook of the Association for Corporate Student History Research 28 (1983), pp. 131–142.
- ↑ Detlev Grieswelle: On the sociology of the Kösener Corps 1870-1914 . In: Christian Helfer, Mohammed Rassem (ed.): Student and university in the 19th century . Göttingen 1975, p. 356ff.
- ↑ Michael Wiest: Where corps history and contemporary history meet . In: Werner Lamprecht, Peter Kutter (eds.): 150 Years Corps Rhenania Heidelberg 1849–1999 , Heidelberg 1999, pp. 118–125
- ↑ https://kress.de/news/detail/beitrag/108867-ein-schloss-das-nach-schokolade-schmeckt-jahreszeiten-verlag-bringt-merian-heidelberg-heraus.html
- ↑ Horst Schiller: From the old to the new corp house . In: Werner Lamprecht, Peter Kutter (eds.): 150 Years Corps Rhenania Heidelberg 1849–1999 , Heidelberg 1999, pp. 64–78
Web links
- Search for Corps Rhenania Heidelberg in the SPK digital portal of the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation
- Archive of the Rhenania in the archive portal of the Kösener and Weinheimer Corps
Coordinates: 49 ° 24 ′ 47.4 " N , 8 ° 42 ′ 52" E