Corps Stauffia

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Corps Stauffia

coat of arms Circle
Coat of arms Corps Stauffia Stuttgart.jpg Corps Stauffia Stuttgart - Zirkel.gif
Basic data
University location: Stuttgart
University / s: University of Stuttgart
Founding: February 2, 1847
Corporation association : Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention
Cartel / District / AG: Five-member
Color status : colored
Colours:
Type of Confederation: Men's association
Position to the scale : beating
Motto: Light-air-truth
Gun motto: Gladius ultor noster!
Website: www.corps-stauffia.de
The house of the Corps Stauffia in Stuttgart

The Corps Stauffia is a student union in the Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention . The obligatory and colored corps is a member of the so-called Fünferbund , the largest connected friendship union in the Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention.

Color

The Corps Stauffia uses the colors "black-gold-black" with golden percussion . The Renoncen wear a band in the colors "black-gold-white", also with golden percussion.

The motto on which the Corps Stauffia is based is "light-air-truth". The motto is "Gladius ultor noster!".

history

On February 2, 1847, the Stauffia association, which gave unconditional satisfaction, was established at the Royal Polytechnic in Stuttgart as the oldest student association in Stuttgart. It emerged from the "Liederkranz Gesellschaft Stauffia" that was created in 1845. The naming was based on a previous lecture on the Hohenstaufen imperial family.

On May 22, 1863, the association was constituted as Corps Stauffia and became a member of the Stuttgart Senior Citizens' Convention (SC). In the same year, the SC in Karlsruhe, Hanover, Stuttgart and Zurich founded the "Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention" (WSC) as the umbrella organization. On June 2, 1897, Stauffia founded the five-member union with the Corps Franconia Karlsruhe , Rhenania ZAB , Saxonia Berlin zu Aachen and Slesvico-Holsatia Hanover . In May 1913, the Corps, as a suburb of the WSC, led the inauguration of the Wachenburg .

After the forced dissolution of the corps on October 8, 1935, the Stauff tradition was continued in the comradeship of Götz von Berlichingen and from 1947 continued by the Stauffia student association. On June 9, 1951, the Corps Stauffia was restituted and rejoined the WSC. Since its foundation in 1847, over 1000 corps brothers have been recipients of the internal corps association.

Corp house

Corp house

The house of the Stuttgart Stauffen is located above the Stuttgart main station and the University of Stuttgart at the foot of the Killesberg district . The house comprises a ballroom, two pub rooms, a bar, several conference and social rooms, study rooms, study, several kitchens and bathrooms as well as a total of 13 activity rooms over four floors. The inauguration of the Corp house in Kaisemer 15 took place on July 8, 1899. On September 12, 1944, an Allied air raid on Stuttgart destroyed the house from 1948 to 1951 by Eduard Kruger rebuilt. Thanks to numerous investments, the house has been repeatedly adapted to the requirements of modern times through modernization measures.

Members

Gottlieb Daimler , member of the Corps Stauffia
Max Eyth , member of the Stauffia Corps, 1855
  • Wilhelm Sophonias Bäumer (1829–1895), architect and building historian, founder of the Corps Stauffia
  • Louis Braun (1836–1916), history painter, professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich
  • Fritz August Breuhaus (1883–1960), architect and designer
  • Gottlieb Daimler (1834–1900), engine and motor vehicle designer, industrialist
  • August Esenwein (1856–1926), architect in Buffalo, New York
  • Max von Eyth (1836–1906), engineer and writer, later Corps Agraria Bonn EM
  • Hans Frey (1873–1947), colonel division of the Swiss Army
  • Walter Haenel (1862–1928), General Director of Hasper Eisen- und Stahlwerk AG, member of the Klöckner-Werke Supervisory Board
  • Friedrich W. Hehl (* 1937), professor of theoretical physics
  • Hugo Henkel (1881–1952), chemist and industrialist, honorary citizen of the city of Düsseldorf
  • Erwin Hildt (1851–1917), founder of the Justinus Kerner Association, guardian of the Weibertreu castle ruins, honorary citizen of the city of Weinsberg
  • Emil Holz (1840–1915), ironworker, general director of the Witkowitz ironworks
  • Franz Honcamp (1875–1934), professor of agricultural chemistry, rector of the University of Rostock
  • Wilhelm Hoyer (1854–1932), engineer, professor at the Technical University of Hanover
  • Bernhard Kapp (1921–2014), machine tool manufacturer
  • Paul Klunzinger (1828–1919), railway and hydraulic engineer, founder of the Corps Stauffia
  • Otto Kunz (1872–1959), manufacturer, supervisory board member of the Gerling insurance group
  • Wilhelm Landmann (1869–1945), explosives chemist, General Director of Westfälisch-Anhaltischen Sprengstoff AG (WASAG)
  • Alfred Laubi (1846–1909), Swiss railway engineer
  • Karl von Leibbrand (1839–1898), President of the Ministerial Department for Road and Hydraulic Engineering in the Kingdom of Württemberg
  • Karl Mezger (1876–1914), railway engineer, Imperial District Administrator in Togo
  • Alfred Ernst von Niessen (1901–1978), shovel manufacturer
  • Paul Pacher von Theinburg (1832–1906), Austrian industrialist and politician
  • Ludwig Paffendorf (1872–1949), architect and craftsman
  • Eduard Paulus (1837–1907), cultural historian and prehistoric archaeologist
  • Walter Pfeiffer (1891–1971), manufacturer, owner of the Ohler Eisenwerkes
  • Paul Reisser (1843–1927), manufacturer, pioneer of electrical engineering
  • Hermann Reissner (1909–1996), entrepreneur, Senator e. H. of the University of Stuttgart
  • Reinhard Röpke (1930–1993), entrepreneur, managing partner of Hella KGaA Hueck & Co.
  • Friedrich Rösch (1832–1923), secondary school professor, pioneer of fire fighting in western Hungary
  • Friedrich von Schaal (1842–1909), railway and hydraulic engineer, Württemberg construction clerk
  • Hermann von Schmoller (1840–1914), railway engineer, Württemberg construction clerk
  • Hugo Schoellkopf (1862–1928), American entrepreneur, pioneer of the American tar paint industry, shareholder in the power stations of the Niagara Falls
  • Jacob Frederick Schoellkopf junior (1858–1942), American entrepreneur, pioneer of the American tar paint industry, shareholder in the power stations of the Niagara Falls
  • Carl Schumann (1827–1898), architect in Vienna, founder of the Corps Stauffia
  • Konrad von Steiger (1862–1944), Swiss architect, Bernese canton master builder
  • Heinrich Straub (1838–1876), entrepreneur, metal goods manufacturer
  • Knut Urban (* 1941), Professor of Experimental Physics at RWTH Aachen University
  • Friedrich Voith (1840–1913), entrepreneur
  • Walther Voith (1874–1947), entrepreneur
  • Heinrich Wagner (1834–1897), architect and professor at the Technical University of Darmstadt
  • Julius Weiler (1850–1904), chemist and industrialist, founder of the chemical factories vorm. Weiler-ter Meer and the Uerdingen wagon factory
  • Günther Woermann (1900–1967), engineer, manager of the machine and shipbuilding industry and metal goods manufacturer
  • Erhard Wolff (1880–1965), entrepreneur in Bucharest
  • Claas Christian Wuttke (* 1969), mechanical engineer, professor at the University of Karlsruhe - Technology and Economics
  • Alexandros Zannas (1892–1963), Greece's first aviation minister

Holder of the Klinggräff Medal

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

literature

  • Hans Schüler: Weinheimer SC-Chronik , Darmstadt 1927.
  • Michael Doeberl , Otto Scheel , Wilhelm Schlink , Hans Sperl , Eduard Spranger , Hans Bitter and Paul Frank (eds.): Das akademische Deutschland , Vol. 2: The German universities and their academic citizens , Berlin 1931, p. 1017.
  • Carl Heydt: Chronicle of the Corps Stauffia zu Stuttgart , 1960.
  • The Corps of the WSC and the local SC. According to the records of the historical commission , Weinheimer Verband Alter Corpsstudenten e. V., 1980.
  • Paulgerhard Gladen : History of the student corporation associations , Volume 1, pp. 49-63, Würzburg 1981.
  • Paulgerhard Gladen: The Kösener and Weinheimer Corps: Their representation in individual chronicles , Hilden 2007, ISBN 978-3-933892-24-9 , pp. 285–286.

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Meyers Konversationslexikon . 5th edition, Leipzig 1896, supplement to the article student associations .
  2. ^ Ernst Hans Eberhard : Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 147.