Corps Neoborussia-Berlin to Bochum
Corps Neoborussia-Berlin to Bochum | |
---|---|
university |
Bochum University of Applied Sciences, Ruhr University Bochum |
Foundation date | July 10, 1838 / February 23, 1922 in Berlin |
Umbrella organization | KSCV |
Seniors' Convent | Bochumer SC |
Motto | Virtus sola bonorum corona! |
Heraldic motto | All for one, one for all. |
Colours: | |
Fox colors | |
Circle | |
Homepage | www.neoborussia.de |
The Corps Neoborussia-Berlin zu Bochum is a corps in the Kösener Seniors Convents Association . It maintains the scale length and has a color . It unites students and former students of the Ruhr University Bochum as well as former students of the TH Darmstadt and the Friedrich Wilhelms University Berlin . The Berlin New Prussians are the only corps in the Ruhr area .
Coat of arms and color
Neoborussia wears the colors "black-white-pink" with silver percussion . The foxes wear a fox ribbon in the colors "black-pink-black". There is a symbolic and a historical explanation for this color scheme. The former says that white stands for flawlessness, black for defensibility and pink for eternal renewal. The latter explanation sees the colors of Prussia in the colors black and white; the added pink comes from the Napoleonic Grand Duchy of Posen , which became a Prussian province at the Congress of Vienna in 1815 and remained until 1919. New Prussians wear a small white cap, the so-called back of the head.
The motto of Neoborussia is Virtus sola bonorum corona (German: virtue is the good ornament ). The motto is all for one, one for all .
The colors of the corps can also be found in the corps coat of arms. The inside of the coat of arms is divided into four fields: The colors of Neoborussia are shown diagonally at the top right. At the top left are the circle and the date of foundation (July 10, 1838). At the bottom right, two bell strikers cross on a laurel wreath around which the first letters of the heraldic motto are wound. At the bottom left a white phoenix rises from pink flames.
history
Berlin
The Corps Neoborussia was founded on July 10, 1838 at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Berlin and met in the same year with the Corps Marchia Berlin and the Corps Pomerania II for the Berlin Seniors' Convent (KSCV) . The roots of the corps lie at the traditional grammar school at the Grauen Kloster There, in May 1836, the students Moritz von Blanckenburg , Alexander von Bredow, Gustav Friedrich Adolf Runge, Karl Droysen, FW Heinrich Hinneberg, JAFW Ramin, AH Hitzer, HG Schmidt, Franz Dreysing FJFE Krebs, Hermann Theodor Wangemann and others formed the Cerevisia monastery brotherhood, from which the Corps Neoborussia emerged in the summer of 1838. "When the SC joined the Kösener Seniors' Convent Association in 1855 , it was formed by Normannia , Vandalia and Neoborussia. Neoborussia was suspended on 23 November 1861 to 14 February 1862 of 22 December 1862 to August. 1865 on August 28, 1864, the socialist politician and fraternity Ferdinand Lassalle of Janko of Racowitza , a member of the Corps Neoborussia, in duel fatally injured.According to a secret cabinet order from the Crown of Prussia , Neoborussia was forced to live with the outbreak of the German War in July 1866 Suspend “forever”.
On February 23, 1922, the Corps Neoborussia was re-established by taking over the active members of the free corps of the same name. It was accepted into the SC zu Berlin on the same day and recognized on July 1, 1922 as a continuation of the old Corps Neoborussia. Ten years later, the Corps was finally suspended on November 7, 1932 in Berlin.
Frankfurt am Main
On April 19, 1952, the Corps Neoborussia reconstituted in Frankfurt as a member of the SC zu Frankfurt, domiciled at the Technical University of Darmstadt . At the same time, she received a guest seat in the Darmstädter SC of the Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention . Cooperation between the Kösener and Weinheimer Corps at SC level was or is otherwise only available in Zurich, Göttingen and Munich.
Bochum
On March 6, 1967, Neoborussia moved to the then young Ruhr University Bochum , where she formed a SC together with the Corps Marchia Bochum, newly founded a year earlier. Since Marchia left the Kösener SC Association on February 10, 1971, Neoborussia has formed the SC zu Bochum as a single corps. After the Weinheimer Corps Teutonia Dresden returned to Dresden in 1994, which had also existed at the Ruhr University Bochum since February 28, 1966, Neoborussia is the only corps at a university in the Ruhr area.
In the 1987/88 office year, Neoborussia managed the KSCV's local business as a single corps of the SC zu Bochum. In May 2013 the Corps celebrated its 175th anniversary. Representatives from politics and culture took part in the celebration
External relations
In the period before the suspension in 1866, Neoborussia was in a cartel with Silesia , Saxonia Leipzig , Marchia Halle and Franconia Jena . The Corps Neoborussia-Berlin has belonged to the Magdeburg district since 1958.
Members
In alphabetic order
- Max Barth (1844–1893), District Administrator in Naumburg, General Director of the Provincial Fire Society of the Province of Saxony, Member of the Provincial Parliament of the Province of Saxony, MdHdA
- Werner Barthold (1908–1996), judge and ministerial official
- Moritz Karl Henning von Blanckenburg (1815–1888), MdR
- Max von Bredow (1817–1893), Colonel, manor owner, MdHH
- Otto von Bülow (1827–1901), Prussian and German envoy
- Bernhard Fränkel (1836–1911), ENT doctor and university professor
- Oscar Fraentzel (1838–1894), professor of heart and lung diseases
- Maximilian von Garnier (1844–1888), lawyer and politician
- Johannes Gobbin (1833–1881), Lord Mayor of Brandenburg an der Havel and Görlitz
- Waldemar von der Hagen (1839–1889), manor owner, district administrator in Westhavelland
- Wilhelm Heinzerling (1828–1896), judge, member of the Hessian Administrative Court, lecturer for the fundamentals of law and economics, member and secretary of the Second Chamber of the Estates of the Grand Duchy of Hesse, President of the Hessian State Synod
- Eduard Hitzig (1838–1907), brain researcher
- Hans-Peter Howaldt (* 1956), professor for maxillofacial surgery in Giessen
- Adolf Kayser (1828–1912), MdR
- Carl Kiehn (1833–1894), manor owner, MdHdA
- Friedrich von Koenen (1836–1899), district administrator
- Paul Langerhans (1820–1909), doctor and politician
- Ludwig von Lockstedt (1837–1877), manor owner, district administrator in Regenwalde
- Johann Georg von Loeper (1819–1900), manor owner, district administrator of the Regenwalde district, MdHdA
- Karl Löwe (1845–1907), President of the Imperial Canal Office
- Iacob Negruzzi (1842–1932), Romanian poet, literary historian and cultural critic
- Leon Negruzzi (1840–1890), Romanian lawyer and poet
- Max Paul Neumann (1874–1937), agricultural scientist
- Adolf von Nickisch-Rosenegk (1836–1895), District Administrator in Düsseldorf and Saatzig, Deputy District President in Danzig, MdHdA
- Peter Pieper (* 1953), forensic archaeologist
- Moritz Pistor (1835–1924), Privy Senior Medical Officer, lecturer in the Prussian Ministry of Culture
- Olaf Reidt (* 1964), specialist lawyer for administrative law
- Gerd Schaefer-Rolffs (1909–1986), engineer and association official
- Hermann Simon von Zastrow (1829–1900), President of the Regional Court in Köslin, Member of the MdHdA
- Friedrich Eberhard Schnapp (* 1938), lawyer and university professor
- Joachim Stoermer (1924–2002), pediatric cardiologist and university professor
- Viktor von Tepper-Laski (1844–1905), District President in Köslin
- Heinrich von Werthern (1838–1879), Lord of Beichlingen Castle, District Administrator of the Eckartsberga district
Holder of the Klinggräff Medal
The Klinggräff Medal of the Stifterverein Alter Corpsstudenten was awarded to:
- Christian Gloria (1988)
- Olaf Reidt (1992)
- Oliver von Rosenberg (1996)
literature
- Handbook of the Kösener Corps student in two volumes. 6th edition, Würzburg 1985, Volume 2, Chapter 1, p. 11.
- Paulgerhard Gladen : The Kösener and Weinheimer Corps. Their representation in individual chronicles. WJK-Verlag, Hilden 2007, ISBN 978-3-933892-24-9 , p. 113 and p. 114.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Ernst Hans Eberhard : Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 11.
- ^ Friedrich cell: monastery album of the 19th century - directory of the teachers and students of the Berlin high school to the gray monastery. Berlin 1904.
- ↑ Shlomo Na'aman: Lassalle. P. 763 f.
- ↑ Paul Gerhardt Gladen: history of the student corporation associations. Volume 1, p. 61.
- ^ History of the Corps Teutonia Dresden ( Memento of the original from March 4, 2016 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 this notice.
- ↑ lokalkompass.de