Corps Rhaetia-Innsbruck in Augsburg
Corps Rhaethia-Innsbruck in Augsburg |
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coat of arms | Circle |
Basic data | |
University / s: | University of Augsburg |
Place of foundation: | innsbruck |
Foundation date: | 1859 |
Corporation association : | KSCV |
Colours: | Green-white-green |
Type of Confederation: | Men's association |
Position to the scale : | beating |
Website: | www.corps-rhaetia.de |
The Corps Rhaetia is a student union in the Kösener Senioren-Convents-Verband (KSCV). It stands for the scale and color. Founded on December 30, 1859, it is the oldest student association still in existence today, which was founded at the Leopold-Franzens-Universität Innsbruck . Since the reconstitution in the winter semester of 2002, Rhaetia has been based in Augsburg.
history
In 1859, students from the Leopold-Franzens University founded the Corps Rhaetia, which in 1862 formed a senior citizens' convention with the Corps Athesia Innsbruck . The Corps Gothia Innsbruck was added later. The first racket gauges were fought by the rhaetians in Munich and Göttingen as gunsmen in the local corps. The first scale length on Innsbruck soil was held in 1862. She was the contrahage of a rhaetier fox with a Prague Franconian who was passing through with thugs in his suitcase and was looking for a junk . In 1863, Rhaetia took over the tradition of the suspended Innsbruck Corps Chinesia. In 1865 the three Innsbruck Corps celebrated the first common Kommers , at which the Tyrolean poet Adolf Pichler gave the speech.
Joined the KSCV
In contrast to Gothia and Athesia, Rhaetia stayed away from the Kösener SC Association at the turn of the century. The suspended Corps Chinesia was taken over by Rhaetia as a traditional corps under the new name Chattia in 1914. Since then, the band can be awarded to well-deserved rhaetians. In 1919 the corps was accepted into the Kösener Seniors Convents Association, for which Alfred Wieser and Gustav Gotthilf Winkel were particularly committed. In the time after the First World War , several corps members fought in the Freikorps Oberland in Upper Silesia , among them Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg . The exiled Corps Austria from Prague was granted the right to stay for one semester in 1919 before moving to Frankfurt a. M. moved. Like the other Innsbruck corps, Rhaetia was shaped by many "Reich German" members, especially through double membership with corps of the blue circle . In contrast to the other two Innsbruck corps, Rhaetia had no relationship with any comradeship after the annexation of Austria . The corps as a whole was disbanded.
post war period
1951 could be reconstituted with the help of Cologne Frisians and Isars. The first two decades went well into the 1970s. At the end of the 1980s it had to be suspended again due to a lack of active members. As the only Kösener Corps in Austria to date , Rhaetia relocated its active operations to Germany and reconstituted it at the University of Augsburg in 2002 . In 2003 she received the rights of a senior citizens' convention .
Members
In alphabetic order
- Hans Georg Bilgeri (1898–1949), lawyer and SS leader
- Jürgen Brickmann (* 1939), physicist
- Josef Daimer (1845–1909), local doctor in Tyrol, pioneer of alpinism in the Tauferer Ahrntal
- Karl Deutsch (1859–1923), Tyrolean dialect poet
- Ludwig Draxler (1896–1972), politician, Austrian Minister of Finance 1935/36
- August von Druffel (1841–1891), historian, founder of the Corps
- Viktor von Ebner-Rofenstein (1842–1925), histologist
- Arthur von Enzenberg (1841–1925), administrative lawyer and numismatist
- Jakob Fellin (1869–1951), director of the Graz University Library
- Emil Guntermann (1839–1918), Austrian lawyer, member of the Bohemian state parliament
- Hermann Hämmerle (1897–1981), judge and university professor
- Johann Max Hinterwaldner (1844–1912), educator
- Ludwig Hörmann von Hörbach (1837–1924), writer and librarian
- Guido Jakoncig (1895–1972), politician, Austrian Minister of Commerce 1932/33
- Hermann Klotz (1845–1899), gynecologist.
- Matthias Konrath (1843–1925), English studies and university lecturer
- Franz Josef Lang (1894–1975), pathologist
- Johann Georg Obrist (1843–1901), philologist, poet
- Leopold Pfaundler von Hadermur (1839–1920), physicist
- Norbert Pfretzschner (1850–1927), writer and sculptor
- Otto Schmidt (1842–1910), Richter, MdHdA, MdR
- Friedrich Siebenrock (1853–1925), zoologist
- Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg (1899–1956), Heimwehr leader, Austrian Vice Chancellor 1934–1936, corps bow bearer 1919, later retired
- Paul Steinlechner (1841–1920), lawyer, university professor, rector of the University of Innsbruck
- Hans Stiff (1927–2016), journalist and newspaper publisher
- Friedrich Stolz (1850–1915), Indo-Europeanist
- Otto Stolz (1842–1905), mathematician
- Robert Graf von Terlago (1842–1927), member of the Reichsrat
- Josef Tschan (1844–1908), member of the Bohemian Landtag and the Austrian Imperial Council
- Albert Wildauer (1841–1915), Abbot of the Fiecht Monastery
- Gustav Gotthilf Winkel (1857–1937), lawyer, go. Government Council
Holder of the Klinggräff Medal
The Klinggräff Medal of the Stifterverein Alter Corpsstudenten was awarded to:
- Philipp Ulrich Pflaum (2007)
literature
- Leopold Pfaundler von Hadermur : Rhaetierchronik , undated.
- Burkhart Sachs: The Corps Rhaetia Innsbruck 1859-1959 . Innsbruck 1989.
- Alemannia Studens , Vol. 11. Regensburg, 2003, pp. 91-111.
- Paulgerhard Gladen : The Kösener and Weinheimer Corps. Their representation in individual chronicles . WJK-Verlag, Hilden 2007, ISBN 978-3-933892-24-9 , p. 132 f.
Individual evidence
- ^ Ernst Hans Eberhard : Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 171.