Corps Suevo-Guestphalia

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Corps Suevo-Guestphalia
The coat of arms of the Corps Suevo-Guestphalia in Munich
Foundation date: December 10, 1877 in Stuttgart
Association: WSC
Motto: Unus pro omnibus omnes pro uno!
Gun motto: Virtus atque honos!
Corps boy band:
Corps Suevo Guestphalia Burschenband.jpg
Fox band:
Corps Suevo Guestphalia Fuchsenband.jpg
Circle:
Corps Suevo Guestphalia Zirkel.png
Website: www.suevo-guestphalia.de

The Corps Suevo-Guestphalia is a colored and compulsory student association of the universities in the Munich area . The members of the Corps Suevo-Guestphalia are known as "Munich Swabia-Westphalia" and are members of the green cartel in the WSC.

Color

The coat of arms is a round shield, pointed at the bottom and straight at the top. It is held in place by a silver helmet with a three-part, black-white-green, straightened crest. A coat is attached to the head of the helmet and falls over the coat of arms to the left and right. On the top left for the observer, the coat is black, on the right top green and on both undersides white.

The upper half of the coat of arms up to the beginning of the rounding is divided into two parts. In the left field it contains the three Swabian lions in black on a yellow background, in the right field the jumping Westphalian horse in white on a red background. The lower half of the coat of arms, which runs evenly on both sides towards the lower tip, is divided into three parts. In the middle field it contains two crossed silver bats, each with a black-white-green basket. The left field is black, the right field green, both without content.

The boys band is in the colors "black-white-green" with silver percussion and the fox band is in the colors "black-green" with silver percussion.

The active members of the corps wear a black pekesche to the official events .

history

The Corps Suevo-Guestphalia emerged from the merger of the previously independent Corps Suevia Stuttgart, Salingia Munich and Guestphalia Munich.

Suevia Stuttgart

Suevia Stuttgart was founded on December 10, 1877 at what was then the Stuttgart Veterinary School by seven veterinary students. It wore the colors black-white-green and carried the motto Unus pro omnibus - omnes pro uno as well as the weapon slogan Virus atque honos! . Since January 1878 Suevia was compatriot . In March of the same year it concluded a cartel agreement with the Landsmannschaften Franconia Berlin, which was expanded in 1882 to include Normannia Hanover as the "Green Cartel". Whitsun 1884, Suevia joined the Rudolstadt Senior Citizens' Convention (RSC), in which it was converted into a corps with the adoption of the corp principle by the association. At the beginning of 1910, Suevia was relocated to the University of Veterinary Medicine in Munich and merged with the Corps Salingia there in October 1910.

Salingia

Salingia was constituted on July 18, 1896 as a compatriot at the University of Munich with the colors purple-white-green and the motto Do not rest, do not rust . On June 11, 1897, she changed the name to Markomannia and moved the headquarters to the University of Veterinary Medicine. A year later he was accepted into the Rudolstadt Senior Citizens' Convention, and on July 1, 1899, he joined the Green Cartel. Just like Suevia, Salingia converted into a corps in May 1902. In 1905 she had to temporarily suspend her. After the reconstitution on August 17, 1909, it again took the previous name Salingia. On October 16, 1910, the merger with Suevia Stuttgart took place to form Corps Suevo-Salingia , which in 1922 also accepted the members of the suspended Hansea. When a conflict broke out within the RSC in November 1929 about the integration of the Askanischer SC at the technical center in Koethen, the Green Cartel around Suevo-Salingia was one of the leaders of the opposition to the further expansion of the association. A little later she announced her departure from the RSC.

On December 12, 1936, Suevo-Salingia was dissolved. The "Hochberg" comradeship was formed in May 1938 from the old rulers and dissolved again in March 1939. In their place, together with members of the Corps Vandalia, the Hertrich Comradeship was established on February 6, 1939, which also only existed until 1940. On May 27, 1949, Suevo-Salingia was reconstituted in Munich. On October 4, 1952, she joined the Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention (WSC), which had already merged with the former RSC in 1934.

Guestphalia Munich

Guestphalia Munich was founded on July 18, 1879 as a student association Revivia, which included students from various Munich high schools and students from the high school in Burghausen from Munich . It went on October 28, 1883 in a free student association of the same name with the colors black-white-green, the motto Per aspera ad astra and the slogan Ensis sit noster vindex! on. On November 7, 1884, she took the name Guestphalia. After recognition by the university and the introduction of the principle of unconditional satisfaction, in 1886 it transformed into a free country team. The originally intended connection to the Coburger LC did not materialize for the time being. Instead, Guestphalia closed a pounding relationship with the Munich gymnastics association in February 1887. In the winter semester of 1894/95 it was replaced by a lump-sum relationship with the LC in Munich. Whitsun 1895 she was provisionally, one year later definitely included in the Coburg LC. When several Munich compatriots left the association in the course of the crisis of the Coburg LC at the end of the 1890s, Guestphalia was temporarily the only compatriot in the LC in Munich and thus became a gathering point for foreign compatriots traveling in Munich. Nevertheless, efforts soon became noticeable, such as the former country teams Ratisbonia and Transrhenania to join the Kösener Seniors Convents Association (KSCV). On January 12, 1904 Guestphalia resigned from the Coburg LC. However, the application for membership to the Munich SC of the KSCV was rejected. Instead, Guestphalia moved to the Technical University, adopted the corp principle, met with Teutonia to form a SC on November 27 of the same year , and was admitted to the WSC as a renouncing corps on the same day after it had already passed on August 13, 1905 The foundation of the Corps Rupertia Munich made it possible for the Foundation of the Corps Rupertia Munich to submit 5 assets and thus paved the way for the establishment of the WSC in Munich, which was not represented there up to that point. The final admission was confirmed on October 15, 1906. The corps was dissolved on October 20, 1935, just a few weeks later the Guestphalia-Cisaria Comradeship was founded together with the Cisaria Corps , and the "Houston Stewart Chamberlain" comradeship was founded together with the Hercynia Corps Munich in November 1938. Guestphalia was reconstituted in Munich in 1950. It merged on July 6, 1963 with Suevo-Salingia Munich to become Suevia-Guestphalia Munich. Shortly thereafter, the name was changed to Suevo-Guestphalia .

The corp house

The corps house of the Corps Suevo-Guestphalia in Munich at Ungererstraße 33

The search for permanent residence for the active corps, which should also be the focus of entire corps life, runs like a red thread through the 131-year history of the two main corps and the merged corps. There were many stations: side rooms of inns, rented corps floors or corps houses, a house of one's own that had to be sold again when the corps was forcibly dissolved in the Third Reich; New beginning after the Second World War in rented rooms, purchase of the property at Ungererstraße 33, demolition of the villa serving as the corp house and new construction of today's corp house in 1967/1968. The house, inaugurated in 1968, sets the Corps Suevo-Guestphalia apart from other corporations: at the time of the inauguration in 1968, the building was essentially a copy of the " Villa Savoye " designed and built by Le Corbusier in 1929/31 in Poissy in the Near Paris. In its original state, the corp house was characterized by a strict cubic shape, characterized by external concrete supports on the ground floor, curved structures on the flat roof, inside a ramp, exposed concrete and other things. However, the roof design was changed during a later renovation.

The hut in the Zillertal

The hut of the Corps Suevo-Guestphalia in the Zillertal

Guestphalia had owned its own hut since 1930, the Katerhütte on the Neureuth above Tegernsee. It was sold in 1954 because of its poor structural condition. The proceeds were used to partially finance the building cost subsidy for the Corpsheim rented in 1952 on Türkenstrasse. After the sale, the corps moved into several huts between Kufstein and Söll. From 1977 to 2007 the Corps Suevo-Guestphalia had a hut in the Zillertal .

Well-known members of the Suevo-Guestphalia and their predecessors

In alphabetic order

  • Alfred Beck (1889–1957), veterinarian
  • Paul Dierichs (1901–1996), publisher of the Hessische Nachrichten
  • Claude Dornier (1884–1969), German aircraft designer
  • Hanskarl Englert (1913–1995), veterinarian, head of the Animal Hygiene Institute in Freiburg, professor of hygiene and zoonoses
  • Anton Fehr (1881–1954), Reich Minister for Agriculture
  • Walter Friedrich (1883–1968), biophysicist
  • Walter Gmelin (1863–1943), veterinarian, professor at the University of Veterinary Medicine Stuttgart and University of Tübingen, head of veterinary services in German South West Africa
  • Dietmar Harting (* 1939), President of the German Institute for Standardization
  • Herbert Kessler (1918–2002), lawyer, chairman of the Humboldt Society
  • Walter Mahlberg (1884–1935), economist
  • Klaus Mangold (* 1943), entrepreneur
  • Xaver Mayer (1881–1942), General Director of Großkraftwerk Stettin AG, City Councilor in Stettin
  • Kurt Neumann-Kleinpaul (1882–1958), veterinarian, professor of veterinary medicine, director of the polyclinic, later of the internal veterinary clinic and rector of the Berlin University of Veterinary Medicine
  • Robert von Ostertag (1864–1940), veterinarian, university lecturer in Stuttgart and Berlin
  • Wilhelm Pfeiffer (1867–1959), veterinarian, university professor in Giessen
  • Otto Rasenack (* 1899; † after 1970), veterinarian, slaughterhouse expert
  • Walter Spindler (* 1954), Major General of the Army of the Bundeswehr
  • Valentin Stang (1876–1944), veterinarian, university professor in Berlin, President of the German Veterinary Council
  • August Stockelmann (1900–1945), veterinarian, district administrator of the Schönberg district
  • Max von Sussdorf (1855–1945), veterinarian, rector of the University of Veterinary Medicine Stuttgart
  • Horst Wardemann (1930–2006), hydraulic engineer, professor at GH Paderborn
  • Hans Wehrs (1885–1953), state veterinarian for the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg

Green cartel

The Corps Suevo-Guestphalia Munich belongs to the Green Cartel within the WSC. This association connects the Corps Suevo-Guestphalia with the Corps Normannia Hanover and the Corps Franconia Berlin to Kaiserslautern and has existed for over 140 years. The corps in the Green Cartel see themselves as "one corps at three university locations".

literature

  • Heinrich Diedler: The RSC. History of an extinct corps association . In: Einst und Jetzt, yearbook of the association for corps student history research, vol. 55 (2010), pp. 219–366.
  • Hans pupil: Weinheimer SC. Chronicle . Darmstadt 1927
  • Michael Doeberl u. a. (Ed.): Das akademische Deutschland , Vol. 2: The German universities and their academic citizens , Berlin 1931, pp. 960–961
  • Corps Suevo-Guestphalia Munich, Chronicle 1977-2002
  • Corps Suevo-Guestphalia Munich, chronicle 1877-1977
  • Paulgerhard Gladen : The Kösener and Weinheimer Corps: Your representation in individual chronicles . 1st edition. WJK-Verlag, Hilden 2007, ISBN 978-3-933892-24-9 , pp. 233-234, 287-289 .

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ernst Hans Eberhard : Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 97.

Coordinates: 48 ° 10 ′ 2.3 "  N , 11 ° 35 ′ 25.9"  E